The Drug Company Next Door: Pollution, Jobs, and Community Health in Puerto Rico 9780814724644

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The Drug Company Next Door: Pollution, Jobs, and Community Health in Puerto Rico
 9780814724644

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The Drug Company Next Door

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The Drug Company Next Door Pollution, Jobs, and Community Health in Puerto Rico

Alexa S. Dietrich

a NEW YORK UNIVERSIT Y PRESS New York and London

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS New York and London www.nyupress.org © 2013 by New York University All rights reserved References to Internet websites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing. Neither the author nor New York University Press is responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Dietrich, Alexa S. The drug company next door : pollution, jobs, and community health in Puerto Rico / Alexa S. Dietrich. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8147-2499-6 (cl: alk. paper) ISBN 978-0-8147-2473-6 (pb: alk. paper) 1. Pharmaceutical industry—Environmental aspects—Puerto Rico. 2. Pharmaceutical industry—Risk assessment—Puerto Rico. 3. Pollution—Social aspects—Puerto Rico. 4. Pollution—Economic aspects—Puerto Rico. 5. Environmental policy—Citizen participation—Puerto Rico. I. Title. TD428.P54D54 2013 363.73’1—dc23 2012050536 New York University Press books are printed on acid-free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability. We strive to use environmentally responsible suppliers and materials to the greatest extent possible in publishing our books. Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

For Thelma Trotty-Selzer, my first formal teacher of anthropology, who taught me to always question what I thought I knew, and to never forget both the beauty and responsibility of being human. And for Mary Lerner, my mother and my first informal teacher of anthropology, who every day models the importance of empathy in all endeavors.

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Contents

Acknowledgments Key Events Timeline for Nocorá’s Environmental Health List of Acronyms A Note on Pseudonyms Introduction: Understanding Political Ecologies of Risk in Puerto Rico

ix xiii xvii xix 1

Little by Little  19 1 The Dose Makes the Poison: How Making Drugs Harms Environments and People

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Progress  49 2 In the Beginning Was the Corporation: Progress, Pollution, and the Public Trust

51

Playing Politics  77 3 The Rituals and Consequences of Community Politics and Dissent

79

“Fresh Minds” on Parade  107 4 Environmental Justice Is Not Always Just

109

Good Neighbors (A Conversation)  131 5 The Pharmaceutical Industry and the Problem of “Stakeholders”

135

“Salud te recomienda” 163 6 Radical Redistributions of Knowledge: A Holistic View of Environmental Health

165

Epilogue

183

Appendix Notes Bibliography Index About the Author

187 189 209 225 231

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Acknowledgments

This research would not have been possible without access, at a minimum, and trust, in many cases from people at all levels of the project. Virtually every person I met contributed to my thinking in some way, because virtually everyone had ideas about the role of the pharmaceutical industry in Puerto Rican life. Many of those people will go unnamed in these acknowledgments, sometimes out of respect for the confidentiality I promised them, but that does not diminish the level of gratitude I feel for their help and support. The research could not have been accomplished without them, though the conclusions I make in the book (as well as any errors) are my own. Before living in Puerto Rico, I gained insight from industry insiders in my hometown, and benefited from being able to compare the experiences of people there with those in Nocorá. On my arrival I quite literally depended on the kindness of strangers for a safe landing in the field. My most heartfelt thanks to Deepak Lamba-Nieves, who let me sleep on his couch until I found a place to live, and who sang “Don’t Stop Believin’” in a karaoke bar one night when I needed to hear it. Deepak was, and continues to be, a source of humor and insight about Puerto Rico and life in general. Thanks also to Beliza Torres-Narvaez, who broadened my cultural horizons, and was a great sounding board. Erlyn Ramirez gave me my first mallorca and then adopted me practically as her own daughter. She and “las lobas de San Jorge” (especially Hilvita Conde, Sonia Aponte, and Silvia Henríquez) fed and sheltered my body and soul in more ways than I can count. Sonia Aponte gave me early feedback on ideas about environmentalism, and Silvia Henríquez gave me the opportunity to experience NGO work in La Perla firsthand. My work in the town I call Nocorá benefited from the generosity and friendship of many people, activists and non-activists. On the activist side I would especially like to thank Don Pedro and Don Luis, who always welcomed me into their homes, worked tirelessly to give me information, but were adamant that I should draw my own conclusions. Doña Monin said little about the work, but always gave me food and affection, and arranged a >> ix 

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Both Peter and Peggy, with very different but complementary styles, provided critical support and mentorship at a variety of points, and Kate Winskell gave without limits of her time, both as a person and as a professional. I am unquestionably a better anthropologist and person because of them. Dan Sellen gave early support as a committee member and letter writer, and David Nugent played an important role in the last stages of the dissertation. Lesley Sharp, too, has always been an unfailing supporter of mine in medical anthropology, long after her official role as a mentor had ended. An invitation to speak to a seminar class of hers at Columbia gave me an important opportunity to test out early conclusions. Many people gave portions of the manuscript an extra read at various points and provided opportunities to test out ideas. Thanks to Marina Welker, Leah Horowitz, Peter Little, and Adriana Garriga Lopez (with Jessica Mulligan and Victor Torres Velez) for coordinating various panel presentations. Thanks also to Leah for her hard work that helped turn that particular set of papers into publications. Thanks to Merrill Singer for some early feedback and critical questions about an earlier article (Dietrich 2008). In the capacity of unofficial but “above and beyond duty” feedback, Erin Finley, Sarah Willen, Kate Winskell, and Mary Lerner deserve special mention. They always read with both insight and care, and the writing improved greatly. Michael Scholl also gave a crucial reading to an early chapter at a crucial time. At Emory University I benefited greatly from a fellowship with the Center for Health, Culture, and Society, which gave me the opportunity to study epidemiology. The staff at the Center were wonderfully generous and supportive, making the School of Public Health like a second academic home. Joan Herold and Michele Marcus supervised my epidemiology Master’s thesis, and taught me a great deal about the practice of public health. On the anthropology side, I received generous support for coursework, shortterm research, and supplementary training. I would also like to express my gratitude for the biocultural environment of Emory’s graduate program in anthropology. It was not without tension or conflict, but it was ultimately an extremely fertile environment in which the project germinated. The main body of research was funded by the Wenner-Gren Foundation (Grant 7071) and The National Science Foundation (Grant 0314446). I also received grants from the Rockefeller Archive Center and the Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños (Hunter College) for archival research on Puerto Rico’s pre-industrial history. It should be noted, however, that any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of those funders.

xii  xiii 

xiv  xv

2000

Through association with the wastewater activists, CDAN engage a lawyer, filing a public nuisance lawsuit against all the entities involved in the management of the wastewater treatment plant, including the consortium of pharmaceutical companies, on behalf of all of Tipan.

2008

The class of Tipan is declared, and the lawsuit is settled, emphasizing enhanced monitoring requirements.

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List of Acronyms

ATSDR CAA CDAN CDC CSR CWA DoH EPA EQB GRO GUIA NGO NPDES PB PIP PNP PPD PRASA TRI

United States Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Clean Air Act of the United States Comité para Defender el Ambiente Nocoreño (grassroots environmental group located in the Tipan ward of Nocorá) United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Corporate Social Responsibility Clean Water Act of the United States Puerto Rico Department of Health (Departamento de Salud, DS) United States Environmental Protection Agency Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board (Junta de Calidad Ambiental, JCA) Grassroots organization Grupo Uniendo Iniciativa Ambiental (regional environmental NGO) Nongovernmental organization National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Planning Board of Puerto Rico (Junta de Planificación, JP) Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño (“pipiolos”; Puerto Rican Independence Party) Partido Nuevo Progresista (“penepés”; New Progressive Party, promotes statehood) Partido Popular Democratico (“populares”; Popular Democratic Party, founding party of the political status quo, The Commonwealth or “Free Associated State”) Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados, AAA) Toxic Release Inventory

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A Note on Pseudonyms Three may keep a Secret, if two of them are dead. —Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard’s Almanac (1735)

In anthropology it is traditional to utilize pseudonyms in ethnographic writing, in the most basic sense, to protect our subjects. The practice also has a tie to the notion that we, as anthropologists, enter a community at a given time, and leave it essentially as we found it—and that it lives on, unchanged, in the ethnographic present of our prose. The writing process in this sense, as well as the research process, has been rightly critiqued. However, I believe that it is incumbent upon every anthropologist, indeed every researcher, to revisit the question of pseudonyms for themselves: Who am I protecting (if anyone) by using pseudonyms? (Possible answers to this question include not only our subjects and informants, but the researcher herself, or the university or sponsor of research.) Is the changing of a name, or obscuring of circumstances, sufficient? And is it justified? Does the conformation to this tradition in any way compromise the research? Or perhaps even make a mockery of the effort to protect the subjects from very real consequences of our research, much more widely accessible now in the information age? In the case of this study of the impact of the pharmaceutical industry in Puerto Rico, the question of pseudonyms has been one that I have struggled with almost constantly. It began when I realized (and confirmed with one of the authors of the previous studies) that I was working in a town that had been previously studied, not once, but twice. These studies, one carried out in the late 1940s and one in the 1950s, would provide crucial background material to understanding the emergence of a very particular industry (pharmaceuticals) in this small, otherwise unremarkable, town. Using the same name for the town would maintain continuity with previous studies, creating an unusually rich ethnographic record. * * * There is no way that anyone who knows Puerto Rico, or for that matter who knows the pharmaceutical industry, will not be able to make a strong guess >> xix 

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Figure I.1. Life in the buffer zone. Tucked behind the first row of trees, an outpost of the pharmaceutical complex looms over my recently constructed neighborhood. Photo by the author.

Introduction  >> 3

The production of pharmaceuticals is among the most profitable industries on the planet, even in the midst of the recent global economic crisis.1 Drug companies produce chemical substances that can save, extend, or substantially improve the quality of human life. However, even as they present themselves publicly as environmental stewards, their factories have long been a significant source of air and water pollution—toxic to people and the environment. In Puerto Rico, the pharmaceutical industry is generally considered the backbone of the island’s economy: in the small town of Nocorá, the main field site for this project, there are more than a dozen drug factories representing a small number of multinationals, the highest concentration per capita of such factories in the world. These corporate citizens have brought their human neighbors a degree of economic stability, paid for with longstanding acceptance of significant environmental contamination. The problem of pollution in Nocorá has been widely recognized, and has taken many forms. The area closest to the factories, Salvador la Cruz, is a mix of industrial, commercial, and residential zoning, and the ground, air, and water have all been severely contaminated. The town’s two Superfund sites of ground pollution, the highest concentration on the island, have finally been remediated. Nocoreño public schools have been ranked in the 11th percentile of the nation’s worst schools for local air quality, and the top two sources of the implicated pollutants are drug factories.2 Water contamination, too, has been significant, but it has become harder to quantify, or to tie to any one factory. Since the early 1980s, the factories have sent their liquid wastes, including a wide range of hazardous chemicals, to be processed at the regional wastewater treatment plant in the coastal neighborhood of Tipan. The treatment facility is typically referred to by local residents simply as la planta. Ultimately both Tipan and Salvador la Cruz, and indeed all of Nocorá, have been strongly affected by the presence of the drug companies as corporate neighbors. The experience of those living in Tipan, however, is unique, because their place in the local social and cultural context is significantly different from any other group of residents. This distinct relationship has helped create a grassroots movement of protest aimed at protecting the environment, in spite of unquantifiable social pressure to quietly accept pollution as part of everyday life. The movement has had some success in holding the factories accountable for their actions, but as a result the neighborhood has paid a price. In exploring the dynamics among residents, local government officials, and corporate entities, it became clear just how embedded the pharmaceutical industry had become at every level of the community, from individually unhealthy bodies and families, to socially unhealthy politics and economic policy. This study— one of few uniting the concerns of critical medical anthropology with those

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questions that would continually drive the research: What impact do people believe a demonstrably polluted environment has on their health? What evidence is there that reasonably supports these beliefs—qualitatively, if perhaps not quantitatively? These questions quickly beg two follow-up questions: How do these beliefs influence the way people view their corporate neighbors, which, in spite of their multinational corporate nature, now claim to be part of this small community? And conversely, how do those beliefs influence the actions of those same companies—actions that cannot help but structure, in turn, the society in which they are located? In a global environment of ever-increasing awareness of corporate influence, ethnographic answers to these questions have the potential to contribute to a number of important policy debates—about the environment, finance, governance, and health. There is no doubt that corporations have wrought powerful changes at every level of human society and ecology. But we are far from either understanding their full impact, or being capable of counteracting their more poisonous effects. Although they are often criticized for their high profitability, pharmaceutical manufacturers benefit in public opinion from their association with health care. Although the pharmaceutical industry offers modern society undeniable benefits, one should never lose sight of the simple fact that they are leading members of a broader industry—the chemical industry. Chemical producers have had an unfortunate and well-documented history of turning a blind eye to the environmental and occupational consequences of their business,4 a process sometimes known as “externalizing.”5 Because of the unique relationship of Puerto Rico to the United States, the island is also a place where the enforcement of U.S. federal environmental regulations and the public trust they ensure are often violated in the name of economic development. This may seem like a harsh indictment—but both ethnographic and documentary evidence support the claim. In a striking and recent example, the Caribbean-based nongovernmental organization (NGO) CORALations successfully sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), with the U.S. District Court of Puerto Rico finding abundant evidence of “actions indicative of noncompliance on the part of both Puerto Rico and the EPA” with the Clean Water Act.6 Local EPA officials adhere closely to the prodevelopment narrative that ecological issues must be harmonized with economic necessities. As the CORALations case suggests, the result is that even the local outpost of the institution charged with enforcing federal standards in Puerto Rico does so ambivalently. As many other previous studies of Puerto Rico have demonstrated, there is much to learn by analyzing this special case. As a place that is arguably

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In this book, by-products, rather than traditionally defined commodities, are the focus: that which is produced as a side effect of the making of those “useful” things that “can be turned to commercial or other advantage.”10 In the process of pharmaceutical production there are various toxic by-products, many of which are washed away in wastewater following the process of chemical synthesis, or in the flushing of solvents used to clean manufacturing equipment during routine maintenance. Important research has been directed at the environmental, health, and social impacts of what might be termed “harm industries” such as mining, tobacco, and arguably oil.11 But communities playing host to polluters like the pharmaceutical industry face an even more complex sociopolitical landscape. In their increasingly imageconscious associations with health care providers and public health organizations, drug manufacturers easily position themselves not just as economic saviors, but literally as lifesavers. The research project came together as I learned more through EPA documents, newspaper reports, and even local websites about what Nocoreños refer to in their general discourse as la contaminación. Federally recognized pollution problems12 caused by members of an industry with the mission statement, “Disease is our enemy. Working to save lives is our job”13 present an interesting conflict, to say the least. Critics of corporate capitalism view such apparently contradictory public relations statements as just part of the expected behavior of corporations. Indeed, as public relations (PR) guru Edward Bernays is said to have observed, the goal of PR is to engineer consent by the broader public. Therefore, I was also intrigued by the industry’s shift toward the transformative rhetoric of “Corporate Social Responsibility” (CSR).14 By embracing the language of “community,” as is now common practice through CSR, corporations make themselves particularly good subjects for anthropological research. Anthropologists are now wary of the ways in which the term “community” can be used to make controversial ideas sound good and relevant to those outside the industry. But the term can still help us understand how people think about, and operate within, their local environment and social context. It is useful to think about the key variables that influence culture, and therefore help to define particular communities, as belonging to economic, sociopolitical, and ideological segments of a society. In this sense economic variables mainly include material factors that influence how people make a living and fulfill their basic needs. The ecological environment, natural resources, technologies, and sources of labor are some examples. Sociopolitical factors include institutions through which people are organized, and through which certain groups ultimately have power over others. In most

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the Nocorá community, when they wish to be exempted from responsibilities, and when and how their acts of self-interest are justified. With these core anthropological concerns about community at the heart of this project, I argue that the health and well-being of local residents has never been assessed, discussed, or otherwise considered independently of the town’s relationship with the drug industry since its establishment. As such the dominant narrative of “community health” emphasizes the relative economic impact of the drug industry, while downplaying environmental damage. In contrast, “community health” as viewed by those residents who owe the least to the pharmaceuticals is extremely concerned with long-term environmental impact. This is by no means the first investigation into the impact of institutions into the everyday lives and bodies of Puerto Ricans.21 But it particularly brings the corporation into focus, analyzing the impact of one of the most important institutions of globalization within Puerto Rican society in recent decades.22 Many of us are used to thinking of globalization as a recent phenomenon, a mass movement of political, economic, and other cultural changes riding on a wave of technology and mass-market capitalism. But globalization has been shaping the lives of Puerto Ricans for more than 500 years, creating a society that has seen broad environmental changes, reducing old risks, and creating new ones. Therefore, the concept of risk is central to understanding the impact of the pharmaceutical industry on Puerto Rican society. Theoretical Concerns Environmental Risk in Anthropological Terms The literature on risk is substantial, encompassing both “scientific” risk23 and perceptions of risk in a global modern society fraught with potential dangers.24 All risk is culturally constructed.25 In order to understand how risk operates in human society, we need to consider the different contexts in which different types of knowledge about risk come into play and how they ultimately influence action. Many variables can influence how people define and interpret the riskiness of a particular behavior, or substance. But one of the most significant variables is whether or not the person making that judgment trusts the source of the information about that potential risk.26 An emerging public health consensus of ecologically informed multivariate risk27 belies the traditional description of chronic pollution as merely a “nuisance.” Nevertheless, the effects of chronic pollution can be difficult to quantify. It is particularly in the broader context of health evaluation that medical anthropology contributes to understanding risks not easily

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as a result of the pharmaceutical factories’ activities. These activities are not restricted to manufacturing—the companies play a multifaceted role as polluters, economic providers, and social actors. There has been, ironically, a tendency in public health to assign too great a role in the disease process to an ahistorical, naturalized local ecology. In contrast, insights from human geography34 show that the places in which we live have increasingly become “spaces of vulnerability,” making the concept of adaptations to the environment far from value-free.35 The less control people have over their environments, the less it makes sense to view the selective processes of relying on certain behaviors, which may have additional negative consequences, as “natural.”36 Does Corporate Social Responsibility Exist? Ethnographic research on corporate-community relations has brought a number of key questions into relief, such as the production of what has been called “toxic uncertainty.”37 In their exploration of the environmental suffering in the Argentine shantytown of “Flammable,” Javier Auyero and Débora Swistun illustrate the deep contradictions inherent in living in a poisoned and impoverished environment, in which local corporate patronage (in this case of an oil company) further distorts the fabric of social relations. Published after the conclusion of my fieldwork, Flammable demonstrates some themes in common with the experience of Tipanecos described in the following chapters, and is groundbreaking for its illustration of the grayer areas of living a contaminated life. Residents of Flammable received radically conflicting messages about health, safety, and corporate concern. For them, making the best decisions for their families’ futures felt like a virtually impossible task. The ethnographic case of Nocorá builds on this work in a few distinct ways, providing an opportunity for scholars of environmental health and corporate dominance to draw useful comparisons of the different contexts, as well as work through ideas for future work in the field. Among the areas further explored here are the influence of the corporate social responsibility movement itself, the ritualized performance of local government actors and companies, and consideration of the significance of the industry itself (pharmaceuticals) being associated with a generalized public good. Additionally, in Nocorá the community of suffering itself is highly varied. Competing social movements that de-emphasize the environment and/or embrace the industry further complicate corporate-community relations. When consumers begin to demand more accountability, corporations have been shown to change their behaviors. However, large institutions can

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and two companies controlled two distinct complexes each). I initially targeted my interviews with managers responsible for community relations, and through these contacts was sometimes able to interview those working directly on environmental issues. In addition to interviews, I was able to observe and sometimes participate in a number of local activities sponsored by the companies, such as educational fairs, plantings, and corporate team events such as health fund-raisers (e.g., Relay for Life). In approaching government officials my methods were similar, and I relied on both interviews and participant observation in government-sponsored events, as well as public meetings. As with the pharmaceutical representatives, I paid particular attention to when government activities and residential or workers’ activities overlapped. Among local government officials I worked with the alcalde (mayor), municipal legislators, and local Department of Health officials, as well as “regular” employees of those agencies. I also interviewed Commonwealth-level officials in the Planning Board, Department of Health, and both local and federal environmental protection agencies. Although not initially part of my research design, I found when I arrived that I had underestimated the importance of regional and Commonwealthlevel NGOs as representing potential stakeholder positions. In the time between writing my grants and my arrival, the Corporate Social Responsibility movement had arrived in force in Puerto Rico. I conducted interviews, and was able to do extensive participant observation, including taking part in a research advisory panel, with an organization I call TransformaRSE. The organizers of this NGO were working tirelessly with corporations, including most of the pharmaceuticals located on the island, to promote transformative corporate behavior. I also found that several regional NGOs were working to promote both community development and corporate social responsibility, and I was able to work with one in particular, which I call La Vida Cristiana. Additionally, I discovered that a regional environmental NGO, which I call Grupo Uniendo Iniciativa Ambiental (GUIA), had gained national recognition for its work, and I was able to spend some time at their activities, as well as getting to know their director. GUIA was a small operation with a disproportionately high level of influence in the environmental scene in Puerto Rico, and was considered by some to be a front for the pharmaceutical industry. As we will see, the reality was far more complicated, though the organization did indeed have close ties to the industry, EPA, the Commonwealth Planning Board, and the Commonwealth Environmental Quality Board (EQB). Finally, I attempted to focus my attention on the non-institutional level of Nocoreño society in several ways. When I initially conceived of the project,

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observation in a wide variety of community-based activities around Nocorá and in a few neighboring municipalities, as well as in the everyday social contexts that are the bread and butter of traditional anthropological fieldwork. In the quasi-industrial neighborhood in which I lived, several of my neighbors were employed by the companies, but were newcomers to Nocorá. Through them I gained a sense of how length of residence could contribute to overall attitudes. This ethnographic investigation of the community of Nocorá gives ample cause for concern about trends in corporate-community power relations,41 as well as developments in the growing field of “Corporate Social Responsibility” (CSR). The pharmaceuticals have shown themselves quite adept at mastering the emerging rhetoric of CSR, but both words and actions must be examined, and compared, in order to assess whether, and by what standards, a corporation acts in socially responsible ways. While I am trained as an epidemiologist, I did not conduct a traditional epidemiological study42 of either Nocorá or Tipan, although I did examine health data from a variety of other sources. Given limited resources and the complexity of measuring the long-term physiological impact of pollution, attempting to measure the physical suffering of Nocoreños statistically would have distracted from the intent of the ethnographic study, and I was not convinced it would have been productive. Indeed, it would have played into the very cultural problem I was ultimately able to describe so clearly: the overemphasis on the quantification of the effects of pollution. Organization and Chapter Summary The following chapters present several different points at which the pharmaceutical industry has entered Puerto Rican society, as evidenced by the case of Nocorá. In addition to the usual ethnographic stories and quotations that are used to illustrate various arguments in each chapter, between chapters I have also included short vignettes from my fieldwork as introductions to the analytic theme of each chapter. These narrative pauses, structured as separate micro-chapters, serve to give readers a small story to bring into their reading of each successive full-length chapter, enhancing their understanding of why each analytic point matters to lived experience. Chapter 1 tells the contemptible story of Tipan and its long history of struggle with pharmaceutical-related air and water pollution. It describes the emergence of a grassroots movement to improve the functioning of the regional wastewater treatment plant, where the pharmaceuticals deposited untreated chemical wastewater from 1981 through the late 1990s. I argue that Tipan has a community health burden that may not be easily quantified

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This chapter introduces legal and dispute resolution theories that can help the reader think in a more nuanced way about social conflict, an antidote to perceptions that such problems exist solely as either “black” or “white.” Continuing the discussion of power-laden relations between Nocoreños and the drug companies, chapter 5 examines the arrival of the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) movement in Puerto Rico in the early 2000s. A number of ethnographic examples from working with and observing Puerto Rico’s only CSR NGO, as well as the CSR-related activities of the pharmaceuticals, demonstrate the social and economic complexities masked by simplistic, feel-good CSR phrases like “triple-bottom-line” (i.e., company, customers, and community all benefit from successful business). The chapter emphasizes the unique case of Puerto Rico, while at the same time encouraging the reader to consider the many possible consequences of the global CSR phenomenon for local communities, including the problem of “greenwashing.” The concluding chapter returns to the core issue of environmental impacts on health and brings forward the pervasive problem for activists, residents, and pharmaceutical employees alike: the knowledge required to prove that there is a relationship between the environment and poor health is in the hands of “experts,” many of whom are in some way beholden to the industry. Those who are not beholden often have “captured” perspectives: their sincere beliefs, built upon the perceived economic necessity of the drug companies, lead them to discount evidence and experience presented by non-expert citizens. Workers who live in and around Nocorá are additionally vulnerable because their own skepticism about the companies can cause them to ignore restrictive safety measures, supporting the claims that if someone is not healthy it is “her own fault.” In conclusion, I suggest strategies through which activists and educators can work to promote a more equitable redistribution and production of knowledge. This approach would benefit both residents and employees exposed to pollution and unhealthy pharmaceutical work environments. I also describe some philanthropic and programming opportunities for the drug companies to support these efforts, in the event that they are legitimately interested in changing the long-term patterns in their community relationships. Following the main body of research, I have included an epilogue, drawing on my most recent post-field visits and contacts to briefly describe some important events in Nocorá in the years 2006–2012. These stories, in light of changing levels of global awareness of corporations, invite the reader to consider what lasting impact, in some cases if any, these social movements have had for environmental health in Puerto Rico, and for other communities with powerful corporate neighbors.

Figure 1.1. Measuring water quality in Tipan. Photo by the author.

1 The Dose Makes the Poison How Making Drugs Harms Environments and People [N]ow we also hold ourselves accountable for how we produce those medicines. [F]ocusing on the economic, social, and environmental impacts of our businesses and operations. [W]e must operate our business in a manner that protects human health, the environment, our employees and the communities in which we operate. —Representative quotes from pharmaceutical companies’ public relations literature

Although it is a subject that most people would rather not think about, wastewater treatment is rapidly becoming a premiere global environmental problem.1 On a tropical island like Puerto Rico the problem is only magnified, and this problem has been compounded by the increasing need to deal with the industrial waste that also enters the water system. Treatment and management of both domestic and industrial waste has improved in recent decades. Nevertheless, a number of Puerto Rican communities must bear the burden of the compromise made between the financial costs of waste management, and the human and environmental costs of failing to manage them to a high standard.2 The competing priorities of health and economic realities often put these communities in the position of feeling that they must compromise their local environment for the sake of either saving public funds or not alienating the companies that produce the waste. In Tipan, the coastal ward of the town of Nocorá (see map, figure 1.2), the residential neighbors of the municipal water treatment plant have had few incentives to abide pollution without complaint. From the earliest days of its >> 21 

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As I was focusing my camera, I suddenly heard shouting. The guard at the station 100 yards farther on was yelling, and running toward us. I quickly took the picture and hopped back in the car, decidedly freaked out. Don Lirio reassured me with a wave of his hand, and indicated to keep driving up toward the guard. Meanwhile, this man in uniform continued shouting and gesturing angrily that I was not allowed to do that, taking down my license plate number, and generally looking like he was going to burst a blood vessel. Don Lirio and Reynaldo San Pareil both began speaking in calm, rational voices to him, explaining that as residents and members of the “Comité de Olores” they had a right to visit the plant, and that it was a public facility. Don Lirio finally lost patience when the guard swore at us, telling him that he was completely out of line, and lecturing him on being polite to women. Feeling that they had won their point, the aging activists returned to the car, and we drove back down the road toward the beach. “I’m sorry, but I wanted you to see that,” he said as we turned onto the main road. My suspicion that I had been set up was confirmed. “I knew something like that would happen, and I wanted you to see how they are, how secretive. Other people don’t understand, they don’t come here and they don’t know.” Don Lirio, like many CDAN members, often expressed the belief that if only people knew, if they really understood how the plant was managed, as he was trying to demonstrate to me, then they would realize the necessity of what he and the Committee were trying to accomplish; why they often said, “Luchamos por todo Nocorá” [we are fighting for all of Nocorá]. * * * Tipan, coincidentally the subsite of both previous studies of Nocorá,3 had its beginnings as an informal settlement of sugarcane workers near the beach. It became more official in the 1950s by the allotment of land parcels and government-subsidized building projects in which neighbors collectively provided the labor to build one another’s houses. To the east of the original Tipan settlement (hereafter “Barrio Tipan”) lies Tipanito, a more recent settlement of “urbanized” parcelas,4 on the other side of an area of mangroves closer to the water. Barrio Tipan and Tipanito comprise, as of the 2000 Census, 359 housing units. Tipan (in general referring to the whole area) has been the site of the only grassroots environmental movement in Nocorá, in spite of the concerns in the population at-large about pharmaceutical pollution. This chapter explores the development of the wastewater pollution problem, and the emergence of the environmental movement of Tipan. This is a case

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of “community health interests” I include negative physical health outcomes likely related to the pollution (based on community-gathered data, as well as data from my fieldwork). However, what is most obviously being damaged is their overall quality of life and shared sense of well-being as much as their physical persons in an epidemiologic sense. This damaged quality of life extends from the individual and family contexts, into the broader political environment, in which Tipanecos experienced marked discrimination. In spite of their isolation as strong critics of the industry, Tipanecos nevertheless shared many of the economic concerns of their Nocoreño compatriots should the pharmaceutical industry leave Puerto Rico. They asked only that the pollution be competently managed. In considering the broad impact of the power wielded by the pharmaceutical corporations in Nocorá, in Puerto Rico as a whole, and indeed globally, I suggest that they have no need to ally themselves with government in ways that work against people. They could use their influence to materially improve the lives of their residential “neighbors,” and yet often have chosen not to do so. Their pervasive unwillingness to think outside the traditional patron-client model of corporate-community relationships with regard to Tipan proves them not to be transformative corporate citizens8 as their public relations materials would like to advertise (and as exemplified by the quotes on the chapter title page). Rather they are an industry skilled at public relations and crisis management. In anthropological terms, even as they contribute to the economic base of the local culture, they disrupt the environment, and greatly influence social and political relationships. This chapter presents the ethnographic story of Tipan, and the themes raised here will continue to be unfolded and examined in the chapters that follow. Life-saving Drugs and the Problem of Toxic Waste The economic situation of Nocorá had long been dire, and by the 1960s local leaders were still in search of a long-term solution to chronic unemployment. While petrochemical refining companies were drawn to the southern coast, the large quantities of high-quality groundwater located in northern coast aquifers served to lure drug manufacturers. The available water was in need of little treatment prior to industrial use, and the companies were permitted by the commonwealth to drill their own wells, and extract tens of millions of gallons, daily, cost-free. Once established, the drug companies had to plan for the disposal of their copious liquid waste. Typical of accepted waste management practices at the

26  27

industrial waste, the industries of Bajas and Nocorá agreed to sponsor the additional construction required to make the plant a secondary treatment facility.19 The new plant was financed chiefly by a cooperative group of the local pharmaceutical companies, which formed a separate nonprofit corporation (the Nocorá Consortium) to administer the funding for the building and continued maintenance of the treatment plant. At a capacity of 8.3 million gallons daily, by the time of my fieldwork approximately 70 percent of the treatment plant’s influent came from the industries located farther inland, mainly the pharmaceuticals. Early Signs of Trouble for the Nocorá Wastewater Treatment Plant The planning for the new treatment plant did not go unnoticed by environmental activists, at the time often mobilized through networks that also supported political independence.20 Unfortunately, as with many environmental mobilizations in Puerto Rico, many people interpreted the concern solely as “cosa de independentistas”—simply anti-American or anti-corporate agitations by those who wanted to break away from the United States. Don Lorenzo, a longtime socialist activist living in the town center, lamented: “They never listen, just because we’re socialists. But this wasn’t anti-capitalism. It wasn’t about socialism.” His sentiment was echoed in barrio Solita of the neighboring Cacique municipality, where a domestic treatment plant was located, and where residents much later became active in community planning and social justice movements. “Activists came through here when the water company was going to build our plant, with flyers, knocking on doors—and everyone said, ‘Oh, they’re just agitating.’ But now we’re sorry we didn’t listen.” Ricardo Solano, a chemist who was one of the founding members of the activist group CDAN, remembered the establishment of the wastewater treatment plant a little differently than the official version. According to him, a secondary treatment protocol was not initially deemed sufficient. “The government promised us a tertiary-level treatment plant,” he told me with quiet vehemence. “We had community presentations, we asked questions. They promised us a sophisticated plant, capable of treating whatever the industries sent down the pipeline. And they never delivered it.” My informants representing the wastewater treatment industry maintained that properly managed, the plant should have worked. Said one U.S. engineer familiar with the project, “That facility has been poorly operated and poorly maintained. By the late 1980s, the plant was being operated better, but then pharmaceutical production increased immensely. By that time the plant couldn’t take the load being produced.”

28  29

I heard the same story many times about the building of the pipe, the basic version of which was as follows: In the preliminary plans (which convinced the community that they would suffer no harm as a consequence of the plant) the outfall pipe was designed to extend approximately 1.5 miles out to sea to ensure an adequate “mixing zone” for the treated waste.22 The mixing zone for wastewater has the theoretical benefit of further diluting the waste with high concentrations of water (in this case the Atlantic Ocean) so as to reduce the waste-to-water ratio to near negligible levels. However, during the construction of the pipe, the ocean was so fierce that one construction boat was lost, and the completion of the original design distance was deemed impossible. The project was amended, presumably with the approval of the commonwealth’s Environmental Quality Board (EQB),23 and the final distance is now cited at a half mile from shore, at a depth of 27 yards.24 For some this was simply evidence that the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA), with the rubber stamp of the EQB, always amended its projects for its own convenience regardless of environmental or structural consequences. This also became a recurring theme in my discussions with the Tipan community. For others it appeared more sinister. Don Gabriel, who had gotten work driving some of the consulting engineers on the project around town, professed deep doubts about the true nature of the mixing zone. “They claimed the pipe was done. Then they put something, a red dye of some kind, into the system, to see where it came out. When it didn’t arrive, they said that meant it was mixing really well, that it was good. Me, I think they have no idea where the pipe ends.” Available materials seem to document the stated location of the outfall pipe. However, several compelling pieces of evidence also support the concerns of Tipanecos about the interrelatedness of the dumping of waste, the saga of the pipe construction, and the decline of wildlife. First is a statement made by representatives of the Puerto Rico Water Environment Association, the professional organization to which most engineers working with water issues in Puerto Rico belong, including those associated with this treatment plant. In comments made in support of 301(h) waivers for secondary treatment for the treatment plants in Bayamón and Puerto Nuevo, the Association stated: Valid concerns have been voiced about the potential impacts of toxic and bioaccumulative pollutants from municipal discharges. Although secondary treatment may provide incidental removal of some of these compounds, not all such compounds can be managed by biological treatment. Some of these substances can actually have significant adverse effects on

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denied. Given the plant’s ongoing problems, the performance of the denial may have been intended to demonstrate the effectiveness of the permit system, in lieu of other regulatory action. Bad Odors and the Problem of Defining a Problem The secondary treatment phase of the plant was inaugurated in 1981, and within two years there was already evidence of severe problems—and evidence of the difficulty of getting those problems recognized. In a memo to the EPA–Caribbean field office in June 1983, an EPA engineer reported his communications with the earliest incarnation of the group CDAN, and his subsequent inspection of the treatment plant.29 The primary complaint from the community was a phrase that would become ubiquitous in Nocorá for the next several decades, and that would recur repeatedly in my fieldwork: bad odors (malos olores). This simple phrase has a way of sounding at times silly, at times quaint. A bad odor, in common parlance, is something that causes social discomfort more than physical. It is the result of a person nearby who is smoking a cigar, passing digestive gas, or driving an old car. A bad odor is, in the words of the EPA memo, a “nuisance.” It is presumed by most people to be not a big deal, certainly not something around which an entire community can coalesce. It does not sound like the reasonable basis for a lawsuit, or a public health study. In the wastewater treatment literature, however, the monitoring of both odors and corrosion is a constant and serious concern for treatment systems, and the two are in fact often correlated.30 For the town of Nocorá, the subject of malos olores (also called olores objetables, or objectionable odors) is likewise a very serious one, whether the odors come from the treatment plant in Tipan, or directly from the factories. Because of the technical challenges involved in measuring environmental exposures and linking them directly to disease, I will not argue that the disposal of pharmaceutical waste is “killing” the neighbors of Tipan in a strict epidemiological sense (as implied by Francisco’s words in the Introduction). Rather, I wish to consider the proposition that 20 years of pollution and of insufficient action on the part of the polluters has deprived Tipanecos of “what matters most: life and the potential it holds when we are feeling our best,” to borrow a phrase from the public relations materials of a local pharmaceutical company (emphasis added). In many examples of industrial pollution, it is typical for polluters to claim previous ignorance of the potential for harm from their products or by-products, and to earnestly display present-day environmental accomplishments as a counternarrative to criticism. One U.S.-based environmental engineer I

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Within several months of this inspection the community had experienced no substantial relief from the situation, causing the Comité para Defender el Ambiente Nocoreño to once again contact the EPA, this time at the regional level in New York. In October 1983, CDAN received a highly unsatisfactory response from that office. Admittedly, accession to CDAN’s request that the facility be closed until the problems could be resolved was an unlikely outcome, and the EPA was justified in pointing out that without the plant, the industries in the area would have nowhere to dispose of waste, and would have to stop production.34 In what was to become a familiar refrain from officials, the EPA administrator suggested that such changes would cause layoffs of local employees, an outcome she presumed no one wanted. As representative of CDAN, Ricardo Solano had received both this October letter and the field inspection memo of a few months earlier. A comparison of both documents is instructive to understanding the pattern of contradiction that would characterize the community-government-industry interactions for the next 20 years. Notably, both documents addressed the question of possible violations of the NPDES permit. As mentioned, the field inspection memo35 described several strongly suspected violations, evidenced particularly by the foul quality of the effluent discharge. In contrast, the regional administrator’s letter states: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been closely monitoring the [Nocorá] facility with respect to compliance with its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. According to monthly sampling reports that are submitted to the EPA, the facility is consistently in compliance with its effluent limitations. Furthermore, a sampling survey conducted by EPA in April, 1983 also indicated compliance with effluent limitations for a wide range of parameters.36

Given the discrepancy between the poor operational functioning found by the inspector in June 1983, and the confidence expressed by the regional office with regard to self-reported compliance only a few months later, it is not surprising that the residents of Tipan were soon trying to gather their own evidence. Regulations Catch Up—But the Damage Is Done Sitting at Don Reynaldo’s kitchen table, I found myself flipping through photographs, and came across one I recognized. “Look, it’s Don Gabriel,” I said, holding up the picture. “He’s so young.” This was a relative statement, since the Don Gabriel I knew, a fisherman and active member of CDAN, was a

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However, it was not until 1990 that EPA first published an “Effluent Guidelines Plan (55 FR 80), in which schedules were established for developing new and revised effluent guidelines for several industry categories,” including the pharmaceuticals.38 Charging that this plan did not sufficiently meet the requirements of the Clean Water Act, public interest groups quickly filed a lawsuit, and in 1992 a Consent Decree required that EPA begin developing a special rule specifically for the pharmaceutical industry. This process, which began in 1992, required that a rule be proposed by 1995, to go into effect in 1998, and require full compliance by 2001.39 Examining the Toxic Release Inventory(TRI) summaries for the year 2003, and comparing them to the years 1988–2002, the effect of the pretreatment rule on the release of toxins to public treatment plants is impressive. Between 1988 and 2002, when pharmaceutical industries were permitted to send wastewater into the Nocorá treatment plant, they released more than 47 million pounds of TRI-monitored chemicals. The most recent data indicate that they are now releasing primarily the less toxic pollutants for which reporting is required, and in much lower quantities. From the time the plant opened (1981) through 1987, there are no public data. When asked about the pretreatment rule, one pharmaceutical environmental manager extolled the virtues, quite rightly, of their on-site pretreatment system, which, according to an independent environmental engineer who oversaw the project, was absolutely state-of-the-art. Praise of their technological achievements aside, however, the manager did express some resentment of the pretreatment regulations: Each company paid a percentage to build the [regional] plant, and still pays, by percentage, for its maintenance. This percentage gives each company rights to put a certain amount of BOD into the system. But now with the pretreatment required, we’re putting almost zero BOD into the system. So pretreatment regulations have really taken away property rights that we bought and paid for. . . . That’s another way of looking at it.40

While this argument might hold sway in an unregulated market system, under U.S. jurisdiction the property rights of corporations, as legally created entities, are only those that are granted by law. However, as entities with no natural lifespan, it is perhaps not surprising that the corporate view of law is more negotiable and flexible than it might otherwise be. Corporations, like their polluting by-products, may very well outlive the laws that regulate them.41

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There is a group, down by the beach, that has a lawsuit [. . .] and they really might win, might get some money. But they’re not really suffering. They didn’t know they had problems until some big lawyers from San Juan and those environmentalists told them they were suffering. And now, they could really get some money for that.

This attitude recalls the analysis proposed by social theorists42 that people inhabiting oppressive roles tend to see themselves as human, while seeing the groups they oppress as faceless masses, as somehow less than human.43 In this case the manager, an environmental specialist expressing the corporate perspective, could not acknowledge that the Tipanecos had sufficient self-awareness to judge their own experience accurately. His words suggest that his environmental expertise had instead given him the ability to more accurately assess their suffering. And in his judgment, they were not really suffering. Health and Quality of Life Concerns in Tipan From the beginning of the treatment plant’s operations, residents of Tipan reported health problems associated with the odors.44 The acute symptoms they described were primarily respiratory, as well as burning of the eyes and nasal passages. They also frequently reported symptoms that are more difficult to define in strict clinical terms, but which are nevertheless indicative of disturbed health, particularly if they are chronic; e.g., the frequently occurring odors of both domestic waste and chemicals were reported by many residents to cause nausea so overwhelming that they could not eat. The sudden arrival of strong odors was credited with profoundly disturbing the sleep patterns of residents, preventing them from falling asleep as well as waking them in the middle of the night. For residents of Tipan, antiquated notions of miasmic sickness, contamination produced by foul odors emanating from noxious waters, was not a public health fairy tale, but a reality.45 When Don Reynaldo arrived in Tipan in 1995,46 he began coordinating some of his neighbors to write daily reports of the experience of la peste. “We call it la peste, because it is more than just a bad smell,” Don Reynaldo explained. “You see, the word peste, it’s like pestilencia, it gives the idea of sickness.” Recognizing that reports from members of CDAN could perhaps be dismissed as “troublemaking” or “the usual suspects,” he recruited three women from the neighborhood to do reports on their own. “I had Beatriz [his wife] recruit women from her church, because they lived in houses that were somewhat apart from one another [and

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areas. We hope that deep in your hearts you really want to do your best to help solve this problem. Something you have promised so many times that you will do.

Don Reynaldo continued to express his courteous, if desperate-sounding, hope that between the companies and PRASA a solution would be reached, through some combination of better maintenance and more attentive supervision of the treatment plant. Nevertheless, CDAN had begun considering other options, and they began sending information to an environmental lawyer. Nearly another four years would pass before CDAN would actually take the drastic step of naming not only PRASA, but the corporate pharmaceutical members of the Nocorá Consortium, in a lawsuit filed in February 2000. Shortly thereafter, residents began to notice a significant decrease in the frequency and intensity of odors, though periodic problems remained. CDAN members believed, and the ethnographic evidence supports the idea, that without the threat of a court order for oversight, the Consortium and PRASA would have had few incentives to keep the plant under control. The Balance of Power and Control of Information The lawsuit did not endear CDAN to the pharmaceuticals—nor to Nocoreño elected officials. But the official position of the Nocorá municipal government as it was expressed to me was that organized communities are a positive force in the life of the municipality. Speaking of CDAN and the community activism in Tipan, a high-ranking official familiar with environmental issues told me that “the plant has improved because it was obligated to by the community. The municipality, too, has supported the community’s efforts, we’ve given them money to help their organization, brought in experts to work on the problems.” Without prompting, he brought up the lawsuit himself, claiming that it had been an important part of the improvement process, providing a certain kind of pressure, because “bad publicity doesn’t interest the industries.” The municipal administration had, however, also played a role in trying to destabilize CDAN’s legal efforts. One of the “helping” actions promised through the municipally sponsored “Committee on Odors” was to arrange an epidemiological study. The study was supposed to establish whether the gaseous emissions from the treatment plant, particularly hydrogen sulfide and volatile organic compounds, were causing the widely reported respiratory ailments in the neighborhood. It was to be organized, on behalf of Tipanecos, through the alcalde’s office by means of the regional health

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care and/or chronic symptom management that is distributed widely across households in Tipan—a measure of community health seldom addressed by traditional epidemiologic methods. I found that although they tried to be more active in CDAN, a number of local women had difficulty balancing activism, work, and the need to care for family members struggling with asthma and other chronic health problems. Furthermore, when viewed in light of two recent studies of asthma in Puerto Rico, the figures in table 1.1 represent a community health problem that merited serious investigation. A study of island Puerto Rican homes49 suggests that traditional indoor exposures (e.g., mold and dust) are less relevant to asthma locally, in good part because the homes are so well ventilated, as is the case in Tipan. Another study50 using Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (BRFSS) data concluded that asthma prevalence among island-dwelling Puerto Ricans did not differ among age groups, people smoking at least 100 cigarettes in their entire life, or physical activity, some of the “usual suspects” of asthma. Together, these two studies suggest that Tipan’s data on asthma and chronic respiratory problems did indeed deserve the attention of a specially tailored study—a study taking into account not solely the usual individual behavioral variables, but external air quality as well (such as might freely blow into well-ventilated houses from nearby sources). Indeed, as one employee of the local health clinic stated, “The high incidence of bronchial asthma, bad odors, and environmental pollution worry us. Studies should be done to minimize these risks.” Admittedly, the Department of Health does not always have the resources to conduct complex studies that focus on small groups of people. However, scarce resources were not the basis of the failure to accurately quantify Tipan’s health. In an effort to avoid the bad publicity that “doesn’t interest the industries,” the evidence suggests that the municipal government intentionally requested a study that would collect only enough information to effectively blame the residents for any existing pattern of disease (by means of their behaviors). These findings would have ultimately exonerated their local corporate citizens. While the alcalde [mayor] of Nocorá would most likely have supported or been neutral about a suit naming only PRASA as a defendant, he was much colder to the residents of Tipan after they threatened the pharmaceuticals. As the backbone of Nocorá’s economy, they were an integral part of the alcalde’s vision for its future growth and development. In spite of the widespread acknowledgment, including by municipal insiders, that the suit was an essential catalyst to improvements at the plant, Tipan became increasingly isolated and actively removed from participation in the sociopolitical life of Nocorá. During the period of the lawsuit, major development projects were

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compliance with Clean Water Act regulation was a concern for the companies, but their focus on the mixing zone does not suggest a system-wide perspective on the dangers of the wastestream. Furthermore, it does not line up with the later sentiments expressed by local leaders in the field that “Pollution prevention and waste minimization should always take precedence over end-of-the-pipe treatment.”56 This set of comments, also quoted earlier, is one of the most direct examples of how technically accurate information can be bent to the will of the expert, and how easily blame is shifted through expert-based discourse. The memo appealing to the primacy of the mixing zone sought to shift responsibility and cost away from the pharmaceuticals; the later memo promoting pretreatment shifted responsibility and cost away from PRASA (the Aqueduct and Sewer Authority, managers of the wastewater treatment plants). If we consider the proposal to measure at the mixing zone to indicate indifference to the realities of both air and water pollution from the Nocorá wastewater treatment plant (NWTP), the following quote from the same memo shows that minimizing costs was the main concern of the companies: Since it is in the interest of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico to maintain and promote the selection of Puerto Rico as a suitable home for the pharmaceutical industry, the maximum operational flexibility of the [N]WTP should be made available.57

Other documentation from about a year later also indicates that although the Consortium was involved in trying to make improvements to the treatment plant to minimize the odors reaching Tipan, its mandate was to “execute the best alternative at the least cost.”58 It is also important to note in the block quote given earlier the thinly veiled threat that the pharmaceutical industry as a whole would likely abandon Puerto Rico if the proposal was not accepted. The threat of not just one factory abandoning the island, but an entire industry upon which the island’s economy relied substantially, was not an idle one. By 1997, the pharmaceutical preparations industry had secured its place as the largest manufacturing employer in Puerto Rico.59 While the industrial nature of the influent was largely resolved by the pretreatment regulations, the problems of hydrogen sulfide production and corrosion within the system remain constant problems for all treatment facilities. The literature on this issue, as noted above, agrees that only high-quality maintenance will prevent such odor- and pollution-related difficulties. According to the general tenets of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), with which the pharmaceutical companies willingly ally themselves,

44  45

The one from SuperMed, particularly, he was always very gentleman-like with me. I remember him telling me, ‘Don Reynaldo, I think I see a light, it’s a very small light, but I think there is a light at the end of the tunnel.’ He always seemed like he wanted to help.

I asked Don Reynaldo when it was that the environmental engineer from SuperMed (whom I later interviewed) claimed to see this “light at the end of the tunnel.” He guessed it was around 1998 or 1999, before the lawsuit, because they never spoke after the suit was filed. I observed that it was interesting that the pharmaceutical rep had predicted an end to the wastewater problems just around the time that the pretreatment regulation was handed down. I wondered aloud if the tiny light was 2001, when the industry was scheduled to require full compliance. He was quiet a moment, and then he said, “It could be. It could very well be.” The pharmaceutical representatives I worked with represented a range of attitudes toward the average citizens of the community of Nocorá. In considering the group as a whole, it is clear that although the cultural structures of the corporation limited the vision and actions of the managers working in community relations, their individual qualities can make a difference in some areas. One from AlphaPharm in particular gave a much more convincing demonstration of his commitment to his job in “Community Affairs” than was typical. During our interviews and in observing some of his outreach activities, this community affairs manager articulated very clearly that he viewed his role, as a manager and as a person, in terms of doing good in the world. He acknowledged to me once that there were limits to what one person could accomplish, but that in the distinct areas of responsibility in his life (e.g., in the home, as well as at work) he strove to improve the lot of those around him. Demonstrating his grounding in Human Resources, he spoke passionately about his efforts to help AlphaPharm’s employees. “We always try to give the employees we already have the opportunity to get more training to move to a new, better job.” Nevertheless, this industry manager was ultimately unwilling, or perhaps unable, to concede the obvious advantages his company had when dealing with residents’ complaints: money, connections, organization, and arguably a better public image than some local environmentalists. If someone in the neighborhood has a problem, they should come to me. Like the woman who called because she thought our construction had caused the flooding on her street. She called, and I investigated. What I don’t like is when outsiders come in and get involved. I don’t think that’s right.

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that in seeking to explain their own perspectives, and to defend typically self-protective corporate stances, pharmaceutical managers inadvertently revealed many of the paradoxes of the practice of so-called corporate citizenship. With the assistance of government agencies and elected officials, the pharmaceutical companies of Nocorá created an environment in which the evaluation of “what matters most: life and the potential it holds when we are feeling our best,” was, in fact, open to debate. As a consequence, the qualityof-life of Tipanecos was not, in practice, at the core of the pharmaceuticals’ missions. Rather, the most central value remained to minimize the costs of production for the world’s most profitable industry.64 Such obvious human suffering and apparent disinterest on the part of figures of authority often provokes the question, “How did things get so bad in the first place?” It would be easy to shake one’s fist and blame the oppressive nature of an ever-expanding and dehumanizing capitalist system. However, in order to understand how such harmful social relationships and cultural patterns develop over time in a place like Nocorá, it is crucial to take a step back and look at the community through a historical lens.

Figure 2.1. Decaying structure of the old Central (sugar refinery). Photo by the author.

2 In the Beginning Was the Corporation Progress, Pollution, and the Public Trust [O]fficial statistics substantially overstate production of goods and services on the island. The problem arises from section 936 of the U.S. tax code [instituted in 1976 and repealed in 1995 with a 10-year phase-out], which provided strong incentives for U.S. corporations to use transfer pricing to shift reported income to Puerto Rico. . . . U.S. tax policy has done a disservice to Puerto Rico by providing U.S. corporations incentives for investments with few or no employment or local linkages. —Susan M. Collins et al. (2006, 3)

The history of Nocorá is to a large extent the history of the land and its uses. —Elena Padilla Seda (1966 [1956], 273)

As Puerto Rico entered the twenty-first century, a number of scholars undertook the difficult task of analyzing the island’s economic struggles and recommending new pathways to development.1 This is always a difficult task because traditionally the question of development has never been one solely of economic policy. It is necessarily the combined product of political, economic, and social policies, ultimately framing the health of individual bodies and the broader community. As a once-celebrated and then much-maligned development “project,” Puerto Rico in fact has a significant place in the scholarly literature on development.2 Export-led industrialization practices, known as Operation Bootstrap, were implemented in the context of a colonial possession inviting U.S. capital investment to industrialize,3 and ultimately to bring modern infrastructure to the island to benefit the population as a whole. Thus, economic development strategies are nearly always bound up in the debate about the island’s political status (as a Commonwealth or “Free Associated State” of the United States). >> 51 

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This chapter presents a historic perspective on the relationships between ideologies, policies of development and modernization, health, and the environment in Puerto Rico, and specifically in Nocorá. Understanding the history of a place and a problem is crucial to understanding how the problem developed, and to thinking about possible solutions for the future. This understanding is also vital on a social level because it can help the people who bear the weight of the problem to see themselves not solely as victims, but as potential agents of change. In Nocorá, as in many industrialized settings, it is also necessary to examine the efficacy of government regulations meant to control the excesses of economic development, such as environmental and potential public health damage. By taking a closer look at the processes through which projects gain approval, it becomes clear how the history and ideology of development have created a fertile ground for practices that produce social suffering. Industrialization: Appealing to a New Sense of Progress By the 1970s, Puerto Rico’s competitive advantages in traditional labor-intensive manufacturing (such as making shoes and textiles) were already running dry. The other advantages (e.g., common currency with and free access to the U.S. marketplace) were not enough to compensate for these changes.9 Additionally, Puerto Rico had few natural resources that could benefit industrial production, and thus finding new draws for corporate investment required a strategic shift. Unemployment, which had peaked in 1950, and then plummeted to less than 6 percent by 1970, began climbing again almost immediately. Many commentators have bemoaned the rationale of inviting capitalintensive industry (such as chemical manufacturers) to aid a floundering labor market. However, this “diversification in production” was initially part of a broader plan intended to integrate local industries, and thereby strengthen the production base.10 For example, oil refining operations were lured in the hopes of bringing in other factories that could make use of oilrelated products. The combination of capital-intensive production with the existing labor-intensive facilities was supposed to stabilize the overall island economy against market fluctuations. However, the labor-intensive industries were already beginning to move to cheaper labor markets, and the oilinduced recession in the mid-1970s had disastrous effects on Puerto Rico’s foray into that sector. Against this backdrop of struggle to maintain development standards, it is interesting to note discrepancies between overall economic history and

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failed to provide jobs, we must then look into murkier waters, so to speak, for answers. As a high-technology industry associated with the health field, the drug industry has benefited from a widely held association with individual and community-level progress. The bases of this association are, however, subject to much contestation on the local level. On my first visit to Puerto Rico I noted that politics tended to enter casual conversations within mere moments, and my first conversation with Don Felipe del Mogote was no exception. A retired lawyer living in La Cañita, the rural municipality that seceded from Nocorá in the late 1960s, Don Felipe had always been an ardent supporter of the PPD. I first met him over a friendly game of dominos on a Sunday afternoon family visit, and after listening for a while to the ongoing news of a public quarrel over the raising of the U.S. flag he informed me, quite suddenly, that people who criticized the PPD did not have a leg to stand on. “Before them, we had nothing. The hospitals were always full of sick people. Now we have all this, and people want to criticize.” His granddaughter leaned across the table and said, “In case you couldn’t tell, my grandparents are populares.” In saying that the hospitals were always full of sick people, Don Felipe was referring to a population long burdened with the health consequences of severe poverty. In obtaining Puerto Rico as a prize of war, the U.S. government had an immediate interest in making the island and its population less vulnerable to debilitating diseases. Initial public health action against tropical disease began as a combined military-philanthropic effort, uniting U.S. needs to eliminate malaria and other endemic diseases in strategic “war areas” with the broader hygiene programs of the Rockefeller Foundation.19 Having been invited to the island to deal with tuberculosis, the International Health Division (IHD) of the Rockefeller Foundation instead decided to focus on what they perceived to be the greatest need that matched their strengths: eradicating parasitic diseases such as malaria, hookworm, and dysentery. As historian Laura Briggs notes, The IHD was far more comfortable with altering geography—filling in places where water pooled, putting down tile in irrigation canals, building latrines—than with engaging in the politically fraught activity of trying to improve poor people’s standard of living.20

Perhaps not surprisingly, the eugenic social philosophy21 underlying these policies proved to be a contradictory force in public health and development on the island. On the one hand, it provided a liberal logic through which social welfare monies could be directed to improving the economic

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zinc-roofed structures which could not withstand hurricane-force winds, and could expose residents to parasites through dirt floors, a concrete house and a small area of one’s own land made even limited land reform a great success among many of the previously landless population. In a comment typical of this point of view, Benicia, whose father had managed a section of the local sugar plantations, said to me on several occasions, “It was a hard life. Cutting cane is very hard work. People do not want to go back to that, and that is what they see if the industries leave.” The influence of Operation Bootstrap on the cultural politics of Puerto Rico is well-documented.25 Less familiar to many readers is the legacy of Bootstrap’s sister social program, “Operation Serenity.” Aptly named, the goal of Serenity can be described as creating a social environment that promoted the culture and community ideals of the traditional “rural lifestyle that Operation Bootstrap had set up to eradicate.”26 Operation Serenity rescued, and reasserted in a systematic and value-laden manner, the cultural symbolics of the jíbaro peasant (hard work and Christian religion), as well as the indigenous Taíno (noble heritage, which no modernizing force can erase), and in a more limited way, African culture (usually represented by music). Blending these three “races” or “roots” of Puerto Rican culture into a seemingly harmonious spiritual whole, the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture (ICP) created a system that valorized a unique cultural identity. It also took education as one of its core concerns, maintaining a strong role for the modernizing influence overall.27 The separation of cultural politics from political nationalism has been a rich source for social science research on Puerto Rican identities.28 As such it is highly relevant to the formation of communities and therefore to the environment. Together, Operations Bootstrap and Serenity created a new context in which poverty was mitigated, cultural identity celebrated, and rebellion diffused. The overall public perception, that the benefits of development were worth any potential risks, is helpful in thinking about why many Puerto Ricans accepted without much protest what amounted to an assault on their environment, even as evidence of harm began to accumulate.29 However, over time policies more explicitly aimed at minimizing critical public participation in development planning also became part of the process. Politics and the Environment: Status, Pollution, and Paperwork Though the industrial policies of Operation Bootstrap created a boom in the island’s economy in the early 1970s, the success was short-lived. Unemployment among Puerto Rican ages sixteen and over skyrocketed after a 5.5

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Governor’s office]: it has the burden of proof ” when it comes to making recommendations against projects.34 However, the creation of and access to scientific knowledge (and therefore “proof ”) is not distributed equally among those to whom it matters most. To give an example in Nocorá, I found that documents pertaining to new construction or infrastructure projects, required to be made available for public comment, were placed in different locations, depending on the perceived level of existing community criticism. I found proposals for shopping sites and other less controversial projects housed in the municipal public library. However, I found documentation (within copies of the proposal itself) that plans for expansion of the water treatment plant had only been held in offices to which the public had significantly more limited access. The Effects of Policy on Participation In the 1970s the EQB was instrumental in the Puerto Rican government’s attempts to gain autonomy in environmental affairs, arguing that the newly established EPA was not equipped to understand the unique situation of the island. In a resolution presented to the governor in 1973, the chairman of the EQB advocated environmental autonomy from the federal government. He argued that while the laws of the United States applied to Puerto Rico, and the goals with respect to the environment were essentially the same, the imposition of external priorities and timetables would “interfere with the prompt and most adequate solution to our [sic] problems.”35 The resolution went on to recommend, to the Honorable Governor of Puerto Rico to take those actions he judges pertinent to the ends of achieving those legal changes necessary such that Puerto Rico may resolve its environmental problems locally, in harmony36 with the prevailing realities on the Island.

At the heart of the development approach was a process through which the founding regulatory document of the Environmental Quality Board, the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), came to effectively be replaced by the weaker Environmental Assessment (EA) (in which public participation and input are not required).37 The EA was initially envisioned as a preliminary bureaucratic step in Puerto Rico, to be used as the EQB further refined its protocols; however, by 1984 the EQB had formally instituted the EA option as a permanently acceptable alternative to the EIS. The requirement to engage in the full EIS process was reduced to the discretion of the

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assessment of health impacts is very weak. A comprehensive review of the literature as well as 42 examples of U.S.-based EIS documents from years 1979 to 199640 demonstrated convincingly that 62 percent of the studies addressed no health impact at all, and those that do are so narrow in scope as to be virtually useless. We have only to look back to the previous chapter to see how a carefully constructed investigation can create the illusion of no harm. Among those studies that did assess direct health impact, they tended to work from a strict perspective of epidemiological risk, focusing on the quantitative probabilities of people developing cancer from exposure to a single toxin.41 This approach, of focusing on a single source in a direct causal relationship, has come under greater scrutiny within the field of epidemiology,42 and new methodological approaches continue to emerge on the cutting edge of the discipline. As the community epidemiologist noted: I believe that in epidemiology we need to be able to separate statistical significance from clinical significance. I’m very clear on this. Statistics are tools that work when they work. When they don’t work, we need to look elsewhere. A lot of times with a group that’s small, [the p-value] doesn’t mean a thing. Health problems, some of them you can quantify, but not all. You can never quantify the impact of a health problem in all its dimensions.

However, the linear statistical approach is still dominant in the field as it is practiced in the often resource-poor world of public health. And it remains dominant in the area of environmental assessment as well, where developers and local governments seek to cut as many costs as possible to bring a project into being. As one of the EIA experts interviewed by Steinemann says, “Sure, my instincts tell me this [project] is going to have all sorts of health impacts. But how do I figure them out? If I can’t measure them, I can’t put them in the EIS.”43 These methodological and financial limitations contribute to the structural violence that can be caused by industrial development in poorer countries, such that even if no one is making a decision with the direct wish to harm people, the existing system makes it hard not to harm them. It becomes difficult to measure health impacts of new projects, even with the best intentions, and the intentions of government and industry may not always reflect the long-term health of communities as their core concern. Unfortunately, new research methods are costly to develop, and they create new realms of uncertainty for government agencies with interests in approving projects, as well as for industries looking to cover their legal bases at the

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Nocorá’s Land and History Situated on the northern central coast of Puerto Rico, the municipality of Nocorá runs from the limestone foothills down to the coastal plains and the shore of the Atlantic Ocean. Like most northern municipalities it is twice bisected by insular highways, one old (Route 4) and one new (the AutoExpreso). And, like many of its neighbors, Nocorá boasts a rich landscape that includes the ecological treasure troves of mangroves and karstic (limestone) outcroppings (hills of which are known as mogotes). However, these natural resources have been seriously depleted or otherwise damaged by both residential and commercial building practices. The filling in of swampier areas near the coast, as well as the mining of mogotes for construction fill, has been in practice since before large-scale development began. However, these practices have now become an established aspect of the building process, rather than something individuals did in order to build their own houses, make some extra money, or address local mosquito problems. In the early 2000s, the Army Corps of Engineers emerged as the greatest tumba-mogotes (leveler of hills) in Nocorá, taking out a large stone hill in its entirety to construct a dam around the town center. This new dam, and the re-channeling of the Río Grande de Bajas on the town’s eastern bank, has greatly reduced the characteristic flooding of the pueblo (town center). Still, in other parts of Nocorá, flooding from the periodic overflowing of the river has remained a severe problem. In Tipan, where a system of canals once operated by the Land Authority strategically flooded and drained sugarcane fields, natural and man-made debris often caused a variety of waterrelated difficulties for residents. Much of the area once dedicated to sugarcane cultivation lay fallow, or was indifferently harvested for weed-like grasses used for feeding livestock. In some higher-lying areas cattle was grazed on the land, while the fields nearest the shore were increasingly being used to “recycle” the sludge produced by the wastewater treatment plant.47 Though considered by many Puerto Ricans, including sanjuanero acquaintances of mine, to be something of a backwater, Nocorá has always had qualities that have drawn anthropologists to its northern coast. Previously studied twice, both times prior to heavy industrialization, Nocorá has provided significant insight for students of cultural ecology and culture change. Nocorá and the Cultural Ecology of Sugar Elena Padilla Seda and the People of Puerto Rico (PPR) research team arrived in 1949, hypothesizing that the culture48 of Nocorá would be different not

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work did not produce an adequate wage to support a family. Increases in mechanization were resisted by managers because they would have posed “a very serious political and social problem.”52 Although some elites recognized that there might have been a benefit to raising the standard of living for fewer numbers of workers, local managers did not ultimately have the power to change the organization of labor. The poor laborers tended to be less politically volatile as long as they had work (even if their standard of living was very low). As such, maintaining voter complacency was the practical goal of the project, although the higher-minded goal of proportional profitsharing had been its organizing principle. Organized labor was moderately active in Nocorá prior to the establishment of the government-owned sugar industry, but the effectiveness of strikes and collective bargaining had been effectively minimized. “By giving concessions and privileges to certain workers upon whose loyalties the employers could count, the landowners undermined the class solidarity of the workers,” notes Padilla Seda.53 The union’s goal was likewise to have as many workers as possible, rather than advocate for higher wages for established workers. In a pattern that a number of my informants claimed continued to characterize existing union activity in Puerto Rico, “labor leadership had become so centralized and autocratic that it often failed to recognize local needs and made agreements with local employers that thwarted the aims of the local employees.”54 The Puerto Rican Federation of Labor did succeed in creating active voter support for the Socialist Party (PS) in Nocorá.55 In 1924, the Socialist Party entered into a coalition with the pro-statehood Republican Party, and collectively dominated electoral politics until the rise of the populares in the mid-1940s. In fact, the Socialist/Republican coalition retained a great deal of support in Nocorá, even in the years leading up to the establishment of the Constitution. In what might seem an unlikely alliance with the professional classes and supporters of big sugar, local workers also tended to support the idea of statehood based on the assumption that it would ultimately benefit workers. When the PPD formulated the Free Associated State, they gained votes from the pro-statehood socialists, while the Puerto Rican Independence Party split off into more or less its present form. In the mid-1960s, when the Commonwealth status had become status quo as opposed to a process of transition, pro-statehood advocates formed the New Progressive Party (PNP). Residents of Nocorá who had once supported the Socialist/ Republican coalition and a pro-statehood agenda had never become very strongly identified with a revolutionary identity, either in terms of politicaleconomic class or political status.56 It is these working-class estadistas who

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inefficiencies and political cronyism, leading many to seek scarce employment in the private sector. Likewise, young people seen as scorning the work of cutting cane were described as “hanging around looking nice until someone sends them passage to the United States.”58 There was nevertheless a concern that the familiar source of municipal employment would be sold to private interests, and would be shut down. This fear was being addressed by amplified public announcement cars (still a ubiquitous form of public communication in the less urbanized areas of Puerto Rico today) to the effect: Dear companions of Nocorá: the Central is not for sale and I assure you of it myself, as your mayor and friend . . . Do not believe those who wish to mislead you with the calls of sirens. The Central is not for sale. This is propaganda of the pipiolos [independence party].59

The Central was sold to private investors a scant two years later, and closed operations completely in 1963. In the wake of this dramatic economic shift, new enterprises were appearing, and new consumer goods soon followed. Small-scale clothing manufacturing marked the slow movement of Nocorá toward economic development,60 and radios, televisions, refrigerators, and other amenities were becoming more common. Informants from Tipan commented on the higher costs of living, the overall lack of work, and the need for the government to build better roads. The car fare from the town center to the beach had tripled.61 The older men and women talked about the large numbers of young people going to work in the States (ironically many still in agriculture, via the government-sponsored Migration Program).62 In Tipan many of the houses were made of cement, rather than wood or thatch, with windows covered with Miami blinds. However, local residents seemed unimpressed by the improvement in their lodgings, as it held little relationship to improved personal economic conditions. “‘The government,’ [Don Andrés] comments resignedly, ‘gave us this little house so that poverty does not leave us without protection when those seasons come’.”63 But in addition to the houses themselves, Seda Bonilla saw that even beachside Tipan had electrical cables draping across balconies, and a television antenna on the roof of a local political leader’s house. Walking through Tipan, he also noticed the stark absence of young people. His survey of Tipan revealed almost a complete dearth of residents of childbearing age, as many had begun to migrate to the mainland for work on a quasi-permanent basis (in contrast to the earlier circular migration

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municipal funds like one who is taking money out of his own pocket.” Other residents observed his actions of charity, such as the traditional giving of gifts around the Christmas holidays, with greater skepticism, noting “Out of a budget of around $136,000, $49,000 is assigned for Charity.”68 Overall, the atmosphere of political patronage described in Nocorá consisted of two types of loyalty: one, of the kind of personal loyalty described above. Indeed, such personalism might be linked with skepticism, an understandable concern that favors can be retracted, as well as that political leaders are benefiting personally even as they serve. However, an underlying skepticism, as well as doubts expressed by longtime residents as to whether “los grandes” (the big ones) really cared at all about workers and other everyday people, had a way of reinforcing loyalty as well. When politicians or other elites delivered on promises, even a skeptic could feel personally satisfied. The other type of loyalty gaining traction in Puerto Rico was that of political parties, and the easy melding of “the party in power” with “the government” in people’s minds. By the early 1960s the PPD had consolidated its power, and particularly so in Nocorá. Residents, Seda Bonilla observed, had a tendency to blindly commit themselves to the party, under the belief that the party was controlling all the mechanisms of government—and ultimately all the services required for survival. For those who were most dependent, either for work, or the increasing levels of other types of economic support, the incentive to question government leadership was dwindling. From this perspective true confianza was at a minimum—it was being replaced by dependent personalism, either in politics or in religious healing practices.69 Networks of confianza, the heart of any community, and of centrality to Puerto Rican social relations,70 were being misplaced and manipulated. Local Politics and Government Institutions, Past and Present The alcaldía, or mayor’s office, of Nocorá was overwhelmingly held by the Popular Democratic Party (PPD) beginning in 1941, only three years after the founding of the party by Luis Muñoz Marín. The exception was two terms in the late 1970s and early 1980s, during which a member of the New Progressive Party (PNP, pro-statehood) held the office. However, I was assured by many of my informants that this was not only an oddity, but in fact, the PNP mayor had long been PPD, but changed parties due to some internal party squabbling. In the election of 1984 Nocorá’s only PNP mayor was replaced by yet another PPD candidate. Estrello Martínez (still the alcalde in early 2012) came to power when the newly minted PPD alcalde died after only

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For all its failure as a source of economic vitality, the sale and subsequent closing of the government-run sugar mill and its associated plantations in 1963 had a devastating effect on the economy and daily life of Nocorá. Then-alcalde Sebastian Robles acted quickly to mobilize the Commonwealth government to create powerful incentives for industrial development, but his vision of an aggressive modernity went beyond economic change. Robles had a driving vision of the future of his town, and was eager to create not just the economy, but the local family itself, in his desired image. In an interview recorded with Robles after his 20-year reign as alcalde, he coupled his vision of progress directly with the need to limit the number of children born in the municipality, thereby allowing women to work outside the home.73 It is instructive to hear a description of the situation in Robles’ own words (translation mine): Thanks to God, the female sterilization program had magnificent results. We had the proof in the 1970 Census. The local population had not increased, owing to the success of the female sterilization program here in [Nocorá]; They closed schools in several sectors [including Tipan, La Planchita, and other poorer areas] because there were not enough children. . . . [walking through the center of town] You might notice many men in the streets. The women are in the factories. [The men] are in other activities, they finish their work early, and then they socialize in the streets. . . . The mothers are not so preoccupied now, because the children of a marriage have been limited to three. This was my great endeavor, that which I have achieved as alcalde of this municipality after 20 long years.

Nocorá was one of three municipalities particularly named (of 77 at that time) which “maintained their local hospitals under municipal auspices exclusively.”74 In a town such as Nocorá, “under municipal auspices” meant that the alcalde set the policies for the hospital.75 In a documentary film addressing the sterilization debate,76 a woman recounts her experience of seeking the sterilization operation at the Nocorá municipal hospital. After watching women going into the hospital and wondering what they were having done, she inquired of the nurse in charge. Upon receiving the information about the operation, she responded eagerly, asking if she, too, could undergo the surgery. The nurse instructed her to go see the alcalde. She was able to get the operation within four days of their meeting.

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Nocorá Today The population of Nocorá remained fairly stable from the time the People of Puerto Rico study was undertaken. Population control measures and substantial out-migration were significant, and until the early 2000s Nocorá was not the sort of town to which people were drawn as new residents. According to the 2000 Census, 84.5 percent of the Nocoreño population (ages five and up) had lived in the municipality for at least five years. Many people I spoke with had lived there most, if not all, their lives. This trend had begun to shift in the years following the Census, and new urbanizations were being built to attract new residents, such as the neighborhood in Salvador la Cruz in which I lived. In developing and selling these new homes, the municipal government relied on the perception that the various pollution problems had largely been solved. Promotional materials suggested that Nocorá was a place where people could enjoy the recently built amenities of good shopping and entertainment in a more bucolic setting. This sentiment was supported by Nocoreños themselves. Overall they tended to be grateful for the benefits of modern life, such as better nutrition, easier access to goods and services. However, the quality of life benefits most often described in Nocorá had as much to do with tranquility, something not typically associated with industrialization. Regardless of neighborhood, Nocoreños time and again expressed to me that their greatest desire was to live their small-town lives in peace, with progress a secondary concern for most. The active labor pool was growing in the early 2000s, owing to a recent influx of new residents fleeing the increasing violence and chaos of the San Juan metropolitan area. But growth was accompanied by rising unemployment. According to data from the island’s Department of Labor and Human Resources, of the population 16 years of age and over, 43 percent of Nocorá residents participated in the labor force in 2000. Unemployment in Nocorá consistently averages 4 percent higher than the rest of Puerto Rico. In a report to the alcalde presented during my fieldwork, it was noted that Nocorá boasted a unique municipal industry profile (fully half the jobs available there were in manufacturing). However, nearly half of Nocoreños worked in other municipalities.79 The report also presented an important element of the dismal reality behind Nocoreño underemployment: among those 18 and older, 45 percent had not graduated from high school. Twenty-seven percent had achieved their “four year” (high school) diploma and had no further schooling. While a certain number of jobs in the chemical plants did not require an advanced degree in chemistry, adherence to many of the quite-elaborate safety

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order to create a sense of connection to political and cultural elites that are paradoxically both paternalistic and increasingly socially distant. Combining the observations from the two quotes at the opening of the chapter, it is apparent that the “uses” to which the land and water have primarily been put are to produce goods and profits for consumption in places that are not Nocorá. It can therefore be argued from a purely economic standpoint that it made the most sense for corporations to focus their economic and political capital in supporting government figures. These relationships “between equals” created leverage through which they could use their influence to achieve their goals, such as getting new construction approved easily, or getting permits to dispose of waste. They had a direct line of communication through which to reinforce the long-standing culturally received, and politically enshrined, wisdom that they are necessary to Puerto Rico. However, from the perspective of benefiting the broader community, the pure economic perspective begins to weaken. The next chapter explores the importance of ritual and confianza in modern Nocorá, assessing how a broader swathe of the community perceived its relationships with its pharmaceutical neighbors, and how these corporations acted to fulfill their role as self-described members of that community.

Figure 3.1. Ruins of an abandoned hotel built on a limestone outcrop in Tipan. Referred to by a local legislator as an “ecological disaster,” the ruins call into question the decision to aggressively redevelop the site. Photo by the author.

3 The Rituals and Consequences of Community Politics and Dissent Communitas breaks in through the interstices of structure, in liminality; at the edges of structure, in marginality; and from beneath structure, in inferiority. —Victor Turner (1969, 128)

Donde manda capitán no manda marinero. [Where the captain is in charge the sailor does not give orders.] —Puerto Rican refrán (proverb)

Community Politics and Dissent

The history of Nocorá, as in all of Puerto Rico, is replete with stories of decisions “made based on health, family economies, or beliefs about modernity.”1 Residents of Nocorá have long struggled to balance their own notions of modernity and progress, highly influenced as they are by both development ideologies and their own, often difficult, life experiences. The quote above is referring specifically to sterilization choices. However, the observation is broadly applicable to many decisions that influence both individual and community health. In the case of Nocorá, making choices about health was likely to mean choosing to be agnostic about the relationship between health and the environment. The overall benefits of their everyday actions played more into immediate conformity with the body politic, and the shorter-term maintenance of the social body. However, the trade-off has been the health of both their individual bodies and the longer-term health of the community, beyond the structure of social institutions, and the performance of social relationships. >> 79 

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forums and the media. The success of these methods of governing required that the alcalde fulfilled certain aspects of community ritual function, which ultimately affirmed his right to then speak for the community to the exclusion of most others. The municipal administration held a tight rein over development planning, whether related to the pharmaceutical industry or otherwise. The alcalde was unquestionably at the center of the decision-making process, if not the sole architect of Nocorá’s path into the future. Observational experience, as well as the alcalde’s own descriptions of his role, supports the conclusion that while the municipal assembly had recently gained the status of “legislature,” and therefore had a more direct decision-making authority with regard to budgets and legal matters, the legislature still functioned largely to give approval to the alcalde’s plans. A two-term representative of Tipan described the system this way: Our function is to study, with at least 24 hours notice, and approve, or disapprove the projects that the alcalde brings us. We may make amendments, changes. We have to approve them by a two thirds vote. We can also bring forward our own projects or proposals. And we negotiate these with him because at the end of the day he is the one who says whether a project is going to move forward or not.

While monthly meetings of the legislature were, in theory, public, they were not well publicized. When I stated my intention to attend the meetings, several of my acquaintances expressed surprise. Those from Tipan particularly warned me that I should be cautious, as they were skeptical that observers would be welcomed unless personally invited. During one particular meeting that I attended, the alcalde had asked permission of the legislature to personally present several expensive budgetary items. The format in that case functioned very much as Schwartzman has described the enactment of many meetings: as a distinctive type of communicative event, rather than a vehicle for problem-solving or decision-making.6 Approval of projects was sought pro forma, and at times critical questions were asked. However, at the municipal level in Nocorá, there was no divided government, and as the local leader of his party, the alcalde was assured of the majority’s support for even his most ambitious ideas. During a later meeting, at which a development project was being approved, I walked into a mostly empty meeting room, and was greeted by the alcalde. He motioned to a jumpy looking man standing to the side, and introduced him as the municipal planner, and we shook hands. As the

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the substantial budget brought it by pharmaceutical payments. As evidenced by the separate office of planning, it had been allowed to take a good deal of control over development in general, and land use specifically. The motto of Alcalde Martínez’s office was “For a good government, a good administration,” and any observer would be hard pressed to have found anything appearing organizationally amiss in the halls of the Casa Alcaldía or the Legislature. However, the degree of control exercised was sometimes viewed negatively by more skeptical longtime residents. “Él tiene sus manos en muchos calderos” [He has his hands in many pots], one woman told me. And while she meant that Martínez was able to exercise a great deal of influence over many local issues, there was, among his detractors, a suspicion that he, like many other politicians, had managed to benefit economically from his power. This issue was brought into relief when, just before the elections of 2004, Martínez announced that he was renouncing his salary, and received some positive press for the act. A flattering cartoon appeared in the local press, and his campaign was quick to capitalize—in my newly built urbanization I received a copy of the cartoon stapled to a full-color cardstock flyer of the alcalde’s face, his name and party prominently displayed for the benefit of any new residents who might have registered to vote in Nocorá. His supporters took it as a sign of his generosity. His critics were quick to point out that he could afford it because, at the very least, he was already drawing a retirement pension from his years of working in public education and government.8 “So all he’s really doing is not getting paid twice!” several informants grumbled. While Martínez was generally considered, by both supporters and detractors, to be the heir of the legacy of Sebastián Robles, this comment recalls several of the more unflattering observations made by Seda Bonilla’s9 informants in earlier decades. Whether or not they approved of his politics or his activities, most Nocoreños agreed that Estrello, as he was generally known in the town, was in charge. While I had heard reports of his brusque treatment of those he considered opponents, and saw some of his terse written correspondence with the Tipan activists, I had several opportunities to witness his powerful charisma as well. There was no doubt that he was a leader who could accomplish much when he wanted to, and who had a distinct vision. Among his more measured critics, I found that it was not so much his overall integrity that they questioned, but rather his obstinacy. Once he had an idea in his head, there seemed to be little to prevent him from carrying out his plan, and in our interviews he acknowledged this tendency. In the service of his impressive development plans (e.g., channeling10 the Rió Grande de Bajas to prevent flooding in the urban center of town,11 re-zoning to

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because people thought of him as Quixotic. Grinning widely at the thought, he explained in a rising voice that it was because he had vision, and sometimes people thought his ideas too big, too expensive, or simply “crazy.” But he exuded a vibrant confidence that in his case, his record of accomplishment would speak for itself, and that he would be remembered as an idealist with chivalrous intentions. Martínez’s confidence could be read all over Nocorá, on the large wooden billboards that were used to announce municipal projects already under way. Typically in Puerto Rico these signs declared the description of the project, the budget, the number of jobs created (if the number was impressive enough), and the government sponsors. In Nocorá there was an additional message. Earlier in his career Martínez used the billboards as a testimonial to his goals, and a desire to fulfill promises, asking: “That God enlighten our mind in order to continue the development of our pueblo.” The word pueblo can be interpreted as “people,” and also as “town.” In the framework of this study, the use of pueblo as opposed to, for example, municipio, is a publicly stated appeal to an emotional sense of community. As time moved on, however, Martínez’s language expressed increasing confidence that continued success was a given. Signage in use during 2004–2005 declared: “With the favor of God, completing what is promised.” None of these observations is meant to imply that Nocorá had not benefited from at least some of the projects he championed so forcefully. However, it is perhaps the open question of what was getting left behind in the vision of this otherwise “good administration” that was at the root of discontent in Nocorá. In Martínez’s own words, the transference of all the powers has permitted that each municipio, each with its own idiosyncrasies, can pursue its own development, its own potential, and attend to its own particular needs, given the space provided through the Law of Autonomous Municipalities. . . . In other words it gives us the capacity to execute, through our own initiative, responding to the needs of our own co-citizens.

This statement directly parallels the arguments for autonomy sought by Puerto Rican policymakers to gain exceptions to federal environmental regulations. And in order to quell any disagreements with Martínez’s administrative priorities, defined by him as progress, he made substantial efforts to ritualistically cement his image as the person responsible for the modernizing changes in Nocorá.

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Three Kings Day, the final act of the traditional Christmas season in much of Latin America, is celebrated in a number of municipalities on the island by gift giving on a monumental scale, from alcaldes to local children. Nocorá was no exception, and one acquaintance assured me that Martínez’s generosity was gaining him a regional reputation. “I know people who’ve come from several towns over,” she told me. Thousands of children lined up in a well-cordoned-off and tightly managed enclosure to receive one of several options, including dolls, balls, and other such small but worthwhile toys. Passing through a well-monitored gauntlet to receive their gift and to shake hands with the alcalde, children and their parents passed into one of the town’s parks where the ubiquitous food vendors and casas de brinca [inflatable jumping houses] awaited them. I stood chatting with Martínez a few moments, as he grinned at the lines of people, telling me that this practice was a long-standing cultural tradition that he took particular pleasure in fulfilling. As I passed into the park, however, even I was surprised to see an elaborate stage area set up for local performers, and in front of the stage, waiting until the first round of giving was complete, were more than 300 bicycles of various sizes, waiting to be raffled off to the children in the crowd.17

Figure 3.3. The great bicycle giveaway. Photo by the author.

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amount of funding from the municipality, the alcalde was often conspicuously absent from these events. The pharmaceuticals, too, provided some sponsorship for Centro Cultural activities and services, notably donating the resources to print a variety of publications, including a quarterly cultural magazine and occasional monographs of local interest. However, the leadership of the Centro was careful to maintain a calculated neutrality: the president, Don Teodoro, had long been associated with the community struggle over the wastewater treatment plant.23 When I asked him about his relationship with the pharmaceuticals, he smiled, saying wryly, “I have a very good relationship with them. But they do not have a good relationship with me.” This statement was indicative of the carefully constructed balance many Nocoreños strive to maintain, effectively drawing a boundary between their social and individual bodies. The Centro’s leaders also saw its mission much as the ICP originally envisioned it: their goals were to promote civic engagement with the cultural traditions of Puerto Rico without being partidista, without getting involved in issues that could be judged as being explicitly political in nature. Achieving this balance of community representation had been tricky. At times during CDAN’s history, they had used some of the administrative resources of the Centro to pursue less confrontational means of bringing their complaints to light. For this reason, perhaps, a pharmaceutical company can be excused if it sent its annual invitation to a meeting about “environmental achievements” to the Centro Cultural, and in doing so believed it had done its part in communicating with “the community.” Similar notices were sent to a regional, officially recognized, non-confrontational, environmental NGO (which I call “GUIA”).24 GUIA also purported to represent the “community” of Nocorá, in spite of the fact that the NGO’s headquarters are located in Bajas, the neighboring municipio. When I asked the president of the Centro, as well as the leader of GUIA, whether they would be attending (and whether I could attend with them), they gave nearly identical answers: (1) the guest list was very strict, only those explicitly invited could attend,25 and (2) no, they would not be attending, because in their experience such meetings were just bragging sessions by the companies to tout their so-called environmental achievements. The meeting would not be worth their time. Underlying this response by the Centro leadership was also a concern that by participating in a communication act such as this annual “report of environmental successes,” they could be seen as validating the industry’s version of its environmental record. Thus, it may be that as a neutrality-seeking repository of community information in the context of Nocorá, the Centro inadvertently

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activities or services. When asked whether they felt the pharmaceuticals had a relationship of good faith and good communication with the community, several Tipanecos not affiliated with CDAN remarked that the companies had good relations with the municipal government. The terms they used drew a clear distinction between el municipio and la comunidad. Some accepted this as the order of things, or at least were resigned to it. Others said it with scorn, implying that the business people would hardly lower themselves to speak directly with people like those from Tipan. As another noted, They work with the municipalities, not with the communities. I don’t have any experience with any community services here. Those that benefit are the municipalities, and they help protect them [the companies] from those who criticize too much.

In fact, the alcalde and his administration described with pride the level of openness that existed between the corporations and the government in Nocorá. From the perspective of making corporations more accountable, however, a relative openness between elite-level players, such as the municipality and the corporations, did not reflect practical transparency with residents. The municipality itself operated decidedly with what is sometimes called a “trust me”26 model of transparency,27 in which most key decisions are made behind closed doors. The words of high-ranking municipal officers strongly made the counterpoint that was so evident in the everyday experiences of the not-so-privileged. The lieutenant alcalde, in one of our conversations, asked me to what degree I was familiar with the Puerto Rican press. “Puerto Rico has a lot of news coverage,” he said. “They’re opinionated, they’re not really objective. I’m not saying that it’s good or bad—it just is.” The alcalde, he explained, had removed the distorting interference of the press as an issue. He liked to resolve problems through negotiation, in the offices of the pharmaceuticals, or in his own offices, not “in the street. If there is some kind of disagreement going on, and the press comes to me, I tell them we’re negotiating.” Removing the press from the process, however, can have dire consequences for a relatively small or disenfranchised group of residents. Without regular, open access to the negotiating tables, they often had little choice but to try their case in the so-called court of public opinion. Many activists, including those more professionalized, who sometimes offered advisory support to groups like CDAN, spoke often of the importance for activists to be media-savvy. In Nocorá, however, the government and

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of mangroves and hayfields. She didn’t realize, as the residents were only too well aware, that whenever rain drained into the canal, it carried material from the wastewater sludge. After attempting to collect a sample of the discolored water the agent left, leaving behind a distinct impression that the investigation would go nowhere. Don Cesar watched her walk away and shook his head. I grew up here, lived in the States for 45 years, and now live here again. People here now don’t know what it was like then—they only think of work, without knowing the consequences. I’ll tell you, there aren’t any wild animals [here anymore]. For me they, they haven’t done anything. I suppose the workers might say something different.

The Quandaries of Nocoreño Public Opinion Understanding public opinion of the pharmaceutical industry among residents of Nocorá, particularly as it related to the environment and to quality of life, was of utmost importance as I conducted the research for this book. It was therefore necessary to supplement my extensive participant observation and qualitative interview data, collected among a broad swathe of people knowledgeable about the role of the pharmaceutical companies, and about life in Nocorá. I conducted a brief quantitative survey (see appendix) among people who lived and worked in the pharmaceutical sphere of influence. My sampling strategy was not intended to represent the municipality as a whole, but rather to gain a sense of the attitudes toward the pharmaceutical companies among a representative group of those reasonably considered to be “stakeholders.”28 I conceptualized the survey as a “stakeholder snapshot,” from which I would not necessarily draw any absolute conclusions, but which would hopefully give statistical weight and some demographic specificity to the overall sense of ambivalence I was gleaning from my more qualitative research. My research, by combining a variety of qualitative and quantitative data about everyday quality of life, seeks to “combine measurements with assessments of what the measures mean to the people being measured.”29 In Tipan, home to the only tangible grassroots environmental organization in Nocorá, and the regional wastewater treatment plant, I went doorto-door to survey residents who were not explicitly involved in the struggle. This approach represented an attempt to measure the variation that might exist in this sector of the municipality. To gain access to other views, I sampled in locations where people were likely to have had some more explicit

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pharmaceutical companies in their midst as acting “in good faith.” They also overwhelmingly (94%) expressed concerns about the quality of their physical environment as a result of the production activities of those same companies. Finally, a majority (62%) also agreed that their “quality of life” would be worse if the pharmaceutical industry were to leave Puerto Rico, as was so feared after the ending of the 936 tax benefits. These data unquestionably present a picture of community sentiment that is complex, and perhaps internally contradictory. It is particularly instructive to note that among a small group of respondents, the pharmaceutical companies might be simultaneously considered “good neighbors” (66%) while not acting in good faith or practicing good communication. This was a conflicted sentiment I noted particularly in Tipan, where residents were often willing to credit the companies with having an overall positive economic impact, and yet were utterly Table 3.1. (continued) N

Percent

1. Our quality of life would be worse if the pharmaceutical industry leaves Puerto Rico. Agree Disagree

126

62

76

38

2. There is a great concern with issues related to the pollution from the pharmaceuticals. Agree Disagree

194

94

13

6

3. The pharmaceuticals maintain a relationship of good faith and good communication with the community. Agree Disagree

119

58

86

42

4. The pharmaceuticals are good neighbors, like part of our community. Agree Disagree

134

66

69

34

5. Between the good and the bad things that the pharmaceuticals bring to our community, there is: more of the bad

45

23

equal proportion

118

59

more of the good

36

18

Note: Totals out of N=207. Some categories may not sum to 207 due to nonresponse.

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desire of the alcalde to use the damage as a rationale to expropriate private lands. These problems are of a much more urgent nature than beach litter. The activity was, in CSR terms, a “win-win,” but primarily from the company’s perspective: It was a harmless activity that appears to help the community and costs the corporation little or nothing. As CSR analyst David Vogel has noted, this combination of qualities is the most desirable for corporations.32 Services related to health were a close second as an area needing improvement (63%), suggesting that while the pharmaceuticals have increased their sponsorship of such activities as mobile clinics, and are a ubiquitous presence at every health-related walk-a-thon (raising money for cancer, heart, stroke, and other medical research and services), people would like to see more concerted efforts at providing much needed services. Walk-a-thons, like beach clean-ups, are feel-good activities33 that bring together groups of people of varying social statuses (here employees of the pharmaceuticals) to achieve a general goal that is hard to fault. As Victor Turner observed, there are those who, in the exercise of daily authority or as representatives of major structural groupings, have little opportunity to deal with their fellow men as concrete individuals and equals. . . . They might find an opportunity to . . . be symbolically at least regarded as the servants of the masses.34

A group of such employees is made equal within their group through the performance of a manual task, and the symbolism of wearing a company t-shirt. With that same t-shirt they are also identified as being part of a high-status, giving entity, and as such are certainly creating communitas within their work environment. Yet raising money for a national nonprofit, such as the American Cancer Society, while building team spirit among workers, and raising the profile of the company (they provide the team t-shirts, which are worn long after the event is over), so often fails to meet the specific and immediate needs of a locally grounded community. In an interview with one CSR manager, in which he described the donations his company made to local health causes, he named the Heart Walk, a once-a-year fund-raising walk-a-thon for the American Heart Association. This example is ironic for two distinct reasons. First, a substantial portion of the money raised through walk-a-thons (and similar events) is from donations collected by participants from friends and family, not corporate philanthropy.35 Second, describing the Heart Walk, and similar events, as an effort the company made toward “prevention” of heart disease is misleading. Raising money for health research in the current system is often raising money for research into drug-related cures—and thus is

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Table 3.2 Multivariate (Logistic) Statistics for Quality-of-Life Survey Question Variable

Odds Ratio

Confidence Limits

18–29

2.843

(0.966 - 8.368)

30–39

4.599

(1.744 -11.913)*

40–49

1.408

(0.550 - 3.601)

50–59

1.510

(0.548 - 4.163)

60 and up

Referent

Ages

“Confianza” Agree

2.505

Disagree

Referent

(1.356 - 4.629)*

* indicates statistical significance at α = 0.05.

Following standard procedures, a logistic regression analysis39 was performed, assessing the relationship between these variables and the belief that quality of life would be worse if the pharmaceuticals were to leave Puerto Rico. The final model revealed that of the original group, only two variables were significantly associated with the quality-of-life statement: Age; and Good faith/Good communication, which I believe to be a reasonable measure of confianza, or trust, between the community and the drug companies. The model statistics appear in table 3.2. Statistical analyses based on this survey cannot, of course, fully explain the complex relationships between demographic and attitudinal independent variables and concerns about quality of life. However, this model is suggestive of some very interesting patterns. First, there was no association between believing that quality of life would decline if the industry left and having either personally worked, or being related to someone, who worked for the industry. Equally interesting is that most of the other “common sense” associations, significant as individual cross-tabulations, drop out in the multivariate model. In this population, which represented a reasonable, if not strictly random, sample of people living and working in Nocorá, being between 30 and 39 years of age was significantly associated with the equation, pharmaceuticals = good quality of life, when controlling for gender,

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Good Neighbors versus Confianza That a majority of respondents, including residents of Tipan, should reply yes to the question of whether the pharmaceuticals are “good neighbors” is not surprising: it is consistent with the modernizing outlook of Operation Bootstrap and traditional development ideas about industry. The expectation in Nocorá is that factories provide jobs, and boost the economy. While only 12 percent of the respondents to the survey reported having personally worked for the pharmaceuticals, 61 percent had family members who had had these enviable jobs. Thus, it seems that Nocoreños were willing to accept the idea that the factories provide jobs much because they know people who have worked there. And while the capital-intensive factories of the pharmaceuticals may not have perfectly met the expectations of many as regards jobs themselves, the process of industrialization has appeared to improve the local economy overall.41 Furthermore, neither philanthropic charity nor Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has a long history in Puerto Rico, and the expectation that corporations would do more than “their jobs,” providing as economic patrons, was only just beginning to gain traction in the late 1990s and early 2000s. I have argued that the question about “good faith and good communication,” on the other hand, represents confianza. Confianza was the word always used by Corporate Social Responsibility advocates in Puerto Rico (and other parts of Latin America) to describe the most necessary foundation of a stable civil society.42 For this group of respondents who have tied their well-being to the drug factories, it appears that the industry has, in this respect, met its CSR mandate of “creating confianza.” We are now left to grapple with a fundamentally qualitative question: How did the pharmaceutical companies view themselves in relation to the “community”? Considering that these statistics draw a picture that is by no means unanimous in its approval of the industry, how was this relationship contested on the ground, in the everyday lives of Nocoreños? It is instructive to look at how the pharmaceutical representatives themselves answered the question: “how do you define the community?” The answers varied, but fell into four distinct areas of emphasis, all companies expressing each to greater and lesser degrees: (1) Geographical proximity to the factory itself; (2) First, our workers; (3) All of Nocorá; and (4) All of Puerto Rico. Here I will address responses 2 and 3 specifically, and will return to responses 1 and 4 (as well as to the here-unspoken community of shareholders43) in my later discussion of Corporate Social Responsibility. The response that “community” for a corporation is first and foremost its workers is, from one perspective, admirable. As the Corporate Social

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pharmaceuticals,” that Nocoreños view the chemical contamination of their environment as part of everyday life. As Doña Graciela, an older woman who worked in the local library, told me with a pronounced shrug, “Well, yes, of course people are worried. But this is our life. There are always things we have to deal with in life. Bregamos con todo eso.” According to cultural critic Arcadio Díaz Quiñones, “Between Puerto Ricans to speak of bregar is to speak of that which is most obvious,” and likewise most specifically Puerto Rican.46 He observes, “There is a vocation of harmony in bregar, to harmonize necessities and interests.”47 For most Spanish-speakers, bregar is a synonym for luchar, and both verbs mean “to struggle.” An apt example in the Latin American context is one of revolution: one may hear a particular cause, something worth really fighting for, referred to as “la lucha.” Across the wide variety of activists I encountered who were working in environmental protection, the cause of improving and protecting the environment was always referred to as “la lucha.”48 For most Puerto Ricans, la brega is a very different space to inhabit than la lucha. As the observations of Doña Graciela suggest, la brega, or the space inhabited by Puerto Ricans in their daily lives, is very much a place in which one deals with things, gets along, chooses one’s battles. It can be said that la brega retains some of its earlier significance of action—it is not passive. But it refuses the intensity of a frontal attack. I encountered a quite pedestrian example of this one evening after a day of nearly unbearable heat, visiting with my friend Benicia. She had been listening to one of her favorite radio commentators during the regular traffic jam coming back from San Juan that afternoon, and he had had a caller asking him if it was correct to refer to the heat, which any dictionary will tell you is masculine (el calor), as la calor. The commentator explained that at least in Puerto Rico, based on usage, he would say that both were equally acceptable. For example, he knew that in places like Nocorá people often said “la calor.” Benicia, laughing, said that she had been very gratified by his answer—because indeed, in her experience the people of Nocorá referred to the heat as feminine. “It’s softer. And there is a sense of resignation about it, I think,” she said. I asked her if the heat was something that everyone just had to bregar, or deal with. “Exactly,” she said. “What use would there be in fighting it?” In my most recent visit to Nocorá in 2011, following the student demonstrations over fee increases at the University of Puerto Rico, I heard a related objection to the more destructive, confrontational actions of some of the protesters—“Yes, things need to change, but that’s not the way to do it.” Samuel’s reflection on getting through life “little by little” continued to resonate strongly with many people.

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in the broader community because they had chosen to fight, while most Nocoreños were more ambivalent about the relationship between industrial pollution and quality of life. This ambivalence, strengthened by the belief that the pharmaceuticals are in some general sense trustworthy, worked to minimize direct opposition, and created a new and disturbing definition of community.

Figure 4.1. Parade for environmental awareness, April 2005. Photo by the author.

4 Environmental Justice Is Not Always Just We are transforming through this evolution the role of public relations, but it’s more than a question of resources; we have to be organized in order to see how we can be most effective with our donations. I believe that organizations need to assume some community values, and that the organization needs to be [present] in the mission we wish to support. —Director of Corporate Social Responsibility, PharmaGigante

We in the bank are trying to start to change the mentality of philanthropy to a mentality of partnership, and our priority is to invest in the non-profit organizations, in their development and infrastructure, by which they will be able to assume a responsibility that neither the government nor private industry can fulfill, and for which the demand is extremely high. —Vice President of Community Reinvestment, BancoGrande

In late January 2005, I received a phone call: it was Don Reynaldo, a representative of the citizens group Comité para Defender el Ambiente Nocoreño (CDAN), requesting that I attend a hearing in San Juan. The judge, he informed me, was to hear arguments in a lawsuit that CDAN members had filed against the locally operated multinational pharmaceutical companies and the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA). Hopes were running high that the judge would finally declare the case a class action, and that a settlement of some kind would be forthcoming. I agreed to attend and to take notes for the committee, feeling that providing an accurate summary of the proceedings to this grassroots organization (GRO)1 would help create a more equitable distribution of information about the case, as many CDAN members had little experience in law and other highly orchestrated forms of public debate and discourse. I also felt it enhanced my opportunity as an ethnographer, as witnessing the proceedings would give me an opportunity to watch the lawyers for both sides in action, and therefore get a better sense of how the pharmaceuticals in >> 109 

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social relationships between those residents and their corporate neighbors have grown more complex.4 The emergence of CSR5 has further confused the issue, creating a language through which corporations are not only able, but encouraged, to identify with local residents as potentially equal “stakeholders.” As we have seen, the alcalde, as elected executive of Nocorá, was often presumed by corporate managers to be the best representative of all of Nocorá’s interests, and other locally elected officials seldom if ever exercised what autonomy they had in putting a check on his actions. Indeed, the local legislative representative for Tipan told me: The reality is, in terms of daily necessities we’re doing well. We’re not lacking investment by the government. This is one reason why concerns about the environment come forward, because with the necessities taken care of, the way society is now, we can worry about the environment. In fact, one thing people have worried about is that with the question of the [wastewater treatment] plant, the bad odors, property values have gone down, and people don’t like that. . . . In terms of development, we have sewers, we have telephones, cable, we have parks, ballcourts, community centers. In terms of development we’re in good shape. I mean, we’re looking ahead, we want to keep moving forward. . . . I’d say more or less we have 80–85% of the kinds of resources we might want as a community.

His comments underscored the notion that not only are people’s lives generally good, but that the underlying reason for complaint is not driven by health concerns, but by fear of diminishing economic value. Through this framework it has become more difficult for local residents to protest chronic contamination, as they are frequently accused of attacking their high-status “neighbors,” the pharmaceutical companies. “Dispute resolution ideologies have long been used for the transmission of hegemonic ideas,”6 certainly the case when individuals and GROs are encouraged (and arguably coerced) into resolving their complaints through the process known as “stakeholder dialogues.” The naturalized value given to the companies and their allies also helps explain how the larger regional NGO (GUIA) has come to dominate the environmental justice scene in northern Puerto Rico.7 By taking up the limited space available for environmental groups in the Nocorá region, GUIA provides a disruptive counterpoint to the efforts of smaller groups such as CDAN. The role of “harmony ideology” is particularly important in “limiting the playing field to a recurrent dialectic between legality and its alternatives.”8 In this context, recourse to court-based dispute resolution may be

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with pollution regulation and control (in this case business and law). When working (and at times identifying politically) with “the people,” it can become easy for government and corporate representatives to dismiss the concerns of anthropological research as naïve, much as they dismiss the concerns expressed by the communities themselves. It also became important to think critically about the vocabulary used by proponents of CSR, as companies have rapidly embraced terms such as “stakeholders” in order to broadcast their interest in what others might call “the community.” The difference between the sentiments of words like “stakeholder” and “community,” however, was palpable even among those who thought the pharmaceuticals held the key to the island’s future. As one local health worker stated, “There must be a way to maintain the pharmaceuticals in our territory, employing Puerto Ricans and creating a sense of belonging.” In CSR terms she was blending the goals of a stakeholder with the desires typically voiced by a member of a community in need. Ironically, even when they showed an interest in the ideas of culture and community, it was often difficult to discuss the application of these concepts with corporate managers or government agents. The operational definitions they used for these concepts tended to be too narrow and excessively functional, terms designed to be used in quickly deployed public relations programs, not nuanced academic analyses. In light of these challenges, I found the notion of “deep capture”13 to be the most useful way of understanding not only the broader politics of pollution and protest in Nocorá, but the micropolitics as well. It is a particularly useful concept for unraveling the complex dynamics through which people and organizations can otherwise be simplistically labeled “sellouts,” “troublemakers,” “traitors,” or ignored altogether. The notion of regulatory capture is not new, described most succinctly in the 1960s and ’70s by the economist George Stigler.14 A free-market economist, Stigler demonstrated through numerous examples the problematic relationship between regulatory agencies and the industries they purport to regulate. Given the powerful incentives and capacity that corporations have to influence their regulators, it is not surprising that they often succeed. In the words of an article from the politically conservative Wall Street Journal, “[t]he people who filled regulatory jobs in past administrations were asleep at the switch because they were supposed to be.”15 In Stigler’s analysis, regulators do not exist to fulfill some kind of idealized public good, but to serve themselves and their affiliated industries. Ultimately, Stigler asserts that the market will succeed where politics fails; that consumers voting with their wallets will have greater control for the public good, than will power-hungry,

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trouble, the most powerful desire most of my informants expressed was to have sociopolitical as well as environmental peace restored to their daily lives. In the Puerto Rican context, the will to harmony is not so much an appeal to religion or tradition (as is the case for many of the examples given by Nader), but rather it is grounded in the economic and development ideologies of the island.25 As described in chapter 2, these ideologies are intimately intertwined with beliefs about material benefits, notably health as well as economic. The notion of harmonizing damage to the environment with economic “progress” is particularly powerful among those Puerto Ricans who believe that they literally owe their lives to the economic and public health initiatives, if not the political dominance, of the United States and Operation Bootstrap. The social body as a whole was arguably healthier in the earlier industrial era, and more recent evidence to the contrary cannot withstand the comparison to, as Don Felipe recalled, “hospitals full of sick people.” The pharmaceuticals entered the Puerto Rican economy as part of a development strategy that could, in theory, provide higher-wage jobs to local workers. But, in practice, the capital-intensive nature of chemical production has contributed substantially to the creation of what has been called a “post-work” society.26 Through federal transfer payments27 and other forms of economic support from the United States, the standard of living has risen sharply. Still, while unemployment on the island remained high, the pharmaceutical/biotechnology sector continued to be promoted by the Commonwealth government and industry interest groups “as a key development area . . . offer[ing] important incentives and support.”28 In a political environment in which cynicism dominates the public discourse, there is a strong tendency for people to feel disempowered in the face of corporations. Peter Benson and Stuart Kirsch29 have suggested that corporations are allowed to produce significant levels of harm due to the resulting “politics of resignation.” The regulatory capture concept elucidates the underlying mechanism through which those institutions charged with oversight become worthy of public skepticism. Deep capture broadens the scope of shared sentiment through which even those who are not outwardly cynical nevertheless participate in creating the sense of inevitability that so benefits the corporate mission. A Tale of Two Environmental Groups Like many environmental GROs, the Comité para Defender el Ambiente Nocoreño (CDAN) has one primary agenda, and they resist being drawn into any others. After 20 years of protest and patient “stakeholder dialogue,” the group’s members reached their limit and sued the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and

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The language of integration implies that community residents were de facto outsiders compared to industry and regulatory agencies. The very structure of groups such as GUIA means that they “have complex political, religious, social and environmental agendas and ideologies, which are often intertwined in an undifferentiated manner.”30 The result is twofold: (1) the structure gave Velazquez legitimacy as a representative of a supposedly unified “community,” and (2) important regulatory players were shielded from direct confrontation over actual complaints, even as they benefited from the illusion of “membership.” In many ways Velázquez, and thus GUIA, was a study in apparent contradictions. He articulated a number of trenchant critiques of the state of the environment, government, and industry in Puerto Rico. He was not especially an apologist for wrongs perpetrated by the industry, though he was painted that way by his detractors. He maintained a defiantly independent stance in his discourse with individuals (like me), and even in regular public meetings. However, in his most publicized speeches, such as those that received more extensive media coverage, he tended to speak very graciously about the pharmaceuticals as partners in his endeavors. And no wonder— as he acknowledged (at times), various 990 tax forms showed, and his critics trumpeted, he received a good portion of his operating budget from the industry’s donations.31 It was precisely because GUIA was perceived as working harmoniously with industry groups and government agents that when they called attention to a problem, it was considered newsworthy. This stood in contrast to habitual complainers like CDAN, who have the same issue for far too many news cycles. By the time I was living in Nocorá, as mentioned before, even a canal running through a Tipan backyard that turned the color of antifreeze was not considered as newsworthy. However, a regularly scheduled GUIA meeting, to plan their annual scholastic environmental fair and parade, was attended by a local reporter. A Long Line of Pro-Industry Government Actors Although the pro-statehood PNP is most closely aligned with the Republican Party in the United States, and sometimes believed to be more probusiness, at the local level in Nocorá it is the PPD that has consistently been the ally of the pharmaceuticals. The sole PNP alcalde, elected in 1976, was the only government official who outwardly campaigned against the levels of pollution created by the pharmaceutical factories, even joining in resident protests outside the factory gates. When discussing corporate-community

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of Nocorá. And while the development projects pursued by Martínez had benefits to the municipality overall, in pursuing them the alcalde demonstrated time and again his disinterest in (and at times contempt toward) the opposing wishes, and even the rights, of individual constituents. In acting as the representative of the neighborhood Tipan with regard to the treatment plant, he convened meetings and assigned various municipal functionaries to the problem, resulting in a great deal of talk and very little action or improvement. This willingness to engage as intermediary between CDAN and the pharmaceuticals ended abruptly when the Tipaneco neighbors sued the companies for their responsibility in the ongoing pollution. His office routinely ignored any petition or communication from known CDAN members, whether related to the environment, transportation, or any other issue that should fall into his purview. As the case was drawing to a close, he made arrangements to knock down the group’s headquarters, in order to build a pumping station for PRASA on that site. While presumably a mechanical necessity for the system, residents considered the move to be in classic Martínez style, using a needed infrastructural improvement as a bulletproof excuse to pay back the group that had caused him so much irritation. The Corporate Citizens In her study of a French community located near a nuclear facility, Francoise Zonabend observed that people “draw on what, if you like, their society has always known, on the enduring facts and cultural messages buried in the social practices that get handed down from generation to generation.”32 In Nocorá the pharmaceutical companies, while relatively recent arrivals, fit so well into the familiar political and social structure that it is perhaps more surprising that they found any resistance at all, than that there was so little. For several reasons I do not call the companies in question by their actual names, the most important of which is that in many ways relevant to the residents of Tipan and Nocorá, the pharmaceuticals work in concert with one another. Scholars of industrial ecology have argued that while their level of intra-company cooperation has not always been consistent, it has been significant, especially with regard to the operation of the wastewater treatment plant.33 Furthermore, to name them as individuals would play into their competition for public trust and favor. Given that drug producers must be seen as trustworthy to successfully market many of their products,34 this competition is fierce. As previously noted, Nocorá at the time of my study (2004–2005) boasted the world’s highest factory per-capita concentration in

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Fighting to Be Heard In spite of their criticisms, CDAN’s approach to activism had not been characterized by aggressive or confrontational tactics. In fact, until 2000 the group emphasized letter writing, phone calls, arranged meetings with local politicians and corporate managers, and of course, attendance at public hearings in an attempt to get their complaints heard. Far from simply stating their concerns and grievances, CDAN had painstakingly documented (to the degree possible) their environmental harm, hoping that “evidence” would speak for itself. However, after being told for nearly 20 years that the problem was “being worked on,” the members of the group felt they had no choice but to sue the pharmaceutical companies. CDAN was once associated with GUIA as one of their satellite community groups, but the relationship quickly became strained. Though the precise timeline is unclear, reasons given for the breakup were agreed upon by group members: discussing the viability of new tactics after years of inaction and suffering, Velázquez lectured Don Reynaldo, then CDAN president, that suing the pharmaceutical industry for monetary damages presented a “conflict of interest.” Velázquez himself often claimed loudly that he “would sue!” if he did not get results by his usual methods, by which he meant he was willing to use a lawsuit to force changes in behavior or pay for cleanup. But for a small, resident-based group like CDAN, whose experience amounted to a string of broken regulatory and maintenance promises, it made sense to try to make a lawsuit as costly as possible. As Don Cesar put it, “money is the language they understand.” This disagreement capped a growing dissatisfaction with the ways in which Velázquez represented the residents’ problems with the treatment plant. In public hearings and similar forums participation is often limited, as time may only be allotted to one person to “represent the community.” On more than one occasion other environmentally concerned residents found that the GUIA spokesman, already a familiar face to local authorities, was always presumed to be that representative, even if he knew little or nothing about their specific issues. Given his standing among governmental and other elites, Velázquez tended to assume likewise that he was the best and most knowledgeable spokesman for all. Furthermore, he was reluctant to cede the floor to someone who might pull the meeting off his message, or distract from his group’s current priorities. It is important to consider GUIA’s major accomplishments in order to understand its broader role in the environmental scene. Many of the achievements in favor of communities fell under the broad category of

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simple dichotomy between “activist” and “sellout” can illustrate. GUIA had an unquestionably positive impact in that it was working to create a broad environmental consciousness, particularly through activities with school age children. This is an area where GUIA could work directly with the pharmaceuticals who also liked to emphasize, as one manager put it, “fresh minds,” looking to the future of a cleaner environment. The corporations could appear to be ahead of the curve, promoting projects that simultaneously drew attention away from the factories by emphasizing individual responsibility, such as for recycling. In describing these programs to me, the manager continued, “We emphasize the protection of the environment through education.” In light of its collaboration with the industry, several local activists I worked with considered GUIA to be what has been termed an “Astroturf ” or fake grassroots group, driven exclusively by corporate interests.43 However, “Deep capture makes clear that people’s intentions and beliefs may have little to do with their behavior and that, insofar as they do, those intentions and beliefs are part of what interests compete to capture.”44 Velázquez and his organization have championed legitimate environmental causes. But even with good intentions toward the environment, a group such as GUIA could do great damage to a more localized environmental cause. A struggling community such as Nocorá could gain theoretical access to the negotiating tables with regulatory agencies and corporations through affiliation with GUIA, as long as they accepted the structural or social limits placed on expression of their problems. Equally troubling, cooperation with a group like GUIA, winner of EPA awards for environmental justice, lent legitimacy to industry, while making groups like CDAN look simply like rabble rousers unwilling to “unite” with a legitimated champion of the environment. Finally, in a context in which more formally organized groups controlled the public discourse about the environment, it became easy to label grassroots activists as ignorant, or, at a minimum, under-informed.45 For many grassroots leaders, activism is not a profession, but one aspect of a multifaceted daily life. CDAN’s Don Reynaldo struggled against exclusion from the discourses of the more powerful, and particularly fought to gain both the attention and respect that his suffering and that of his neighbors deserved. As former president and spokesperson for the group, he had years of experience trying to obtain a great deal of complex information from government and corporate entities, and to disseminate that information among local residents. Likewise, he worked tirelessly to collect and make comprehensive the experiences of his neighbors, and to communicate those experiences to those institutions. Those members of CDAN who had

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Ironically, it was Don Reynaldo who, having only a third grade education, was the most successful spokesman for the movement over time. This was due mainly to persistence, and an impressive dedication to studying the available information, supported by the conviction that his cause was just. But self-education does not alter the claim by officials that “these people simply do not understand,” implying that the science of pollution and its regulation is technically beyond the reach of the average person’s understanding. For example, when discussing neighborhood complaints about bad-smelling emissions, one manager told me, “They don’t realize that just because something smells bad, doesn’t mean it’s toxic.” Velázquez strongly echoed the sentiment that groups of residents with environmental problems do not typically have sufficient knowledge to advocate effectively for their own causes. In fact, what is often being smelled is hydrogen sulfide, which is in fact toxic, though in technical terms it is unlikely to be present in concentrations high enough to merit legal action. Nevertheless, the smell of this chemical is extremely strong even in low concentrations, and even lowlevel exposures can result in symptoms47 characteristic of those consistently reported by Tipanecos. What the manager meant was that no one had consistently proven legal noncompliance, and that their critics were making a big deal out of something that is merely considered legally to be a “nuisance”—in other words the definition of “toxic” from the corporate perspective was strictly legal, not clinical. Velázquez may have been correct, that under certain circumstances these groups could only gain a voice through their affiliation with GUIA. But the example of CDAN illustrates the powerful manner in which his perspective at the same time reinforced his own deeply captured status. In fact, education and professional experience were no guarantee of respect or attention in the corporate-community interaction. Ricardo Solano, a chemist and founding member of CDAN, found that his expertise gained him standing among his neighbors as someone who could help them understand the causes and consequence of the pollution. However, his social standing as a resident allowed him to be labeled as a troublemaker by company managers and local cooperating politicians, and he was lumped in with the so-called ignorant. By the time of my fieldwork, Don Ricardo had become a much less active member of the group, in part because of his frustration at having his own professional, as well as personal, experience effectively erased. These examples illustrate how “expertise” is a complicated social status, with many shifting, flexible variables. In this context, “expert” was as much an ascribed status as an achieved one. Association with the socially

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good works. Drawing attention to their beneficence toward non-PRASA water systems, this regulator-in-chief promoted the discursive shell game in which the listener is encouraged to disregard the damage done by the drug companies to PRASA’s own system in Nocorá. At the conclusion of our interview, as I walked toward the exit, he called after me. “Thank you for working with Gerald Velázquez,” he said. “His work with GUIA is very important.” Returning to the courtroom, it is also important to note the reticence of the judge to sanction PRASA, as a government agency with strong ties to industry, in two specific instances. First, in an example not unusual for the water company, the judge raised the point that there was an outstanding fine related to the case that had not been paid. The lawyer for PRASA, who was young, and appeared flustered, attempted to convince the judge that he was working to convince the agency to pay the fine, and in so doing to secure her good will. She agreed to allow them 15 additional days to pay, after which time they would begin to pay interest. More significantly, CDAN’s lawyer expressed concern that in spite of a lengthy discovery process, and the obligation of PRASA to deliver such documents, an important Environmental Impact Statement had never been sent, and her office had obtained it incidentally.54 In response, PRASA’s lawyer, again looking flustered, responded that he was new to the case and did not know much about the issue. The judge replied that each side must then request whatever documents they required in writing, and that five months hence would be the final deadline for all documentation to be submitted to the court to decide whether or not to declare a class action. The judge then stated for the record that both the lawyers for the pharmaceuticals and PRASA were employing tactics to postpone the decision to declare the suit a class action (a decision that would certainly place a greater burden on the defendants). In practice she gave them little incentive to alter their strategy. Analyzing time itself is crucial to understanding the lived experience of contamination, because in a context of “toxic uncertainty,” time moves differently for different actors.55 Most significantly, time can seem to stand still for people who are waiting for answers to their questions about why they are sick, whether they can move to a new home, or, as in the case of Tipan, whether the corporate entity responsible for their suffering will make any restitution for the harm caused. However, corporate time is not the same as mortal time, in part because corporate time is counted in financial terms.56 For polluted communities engaged in a court case where the opposition has seemingly endless resources, time can, as the expression goes, draw out like a

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In describing the cultural context of Nocorá, the theme of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has already been raised at several points, in conjunction with particular examples (such as employee volunteerism and environmental compliance). The following chapter takes up again the question of “stakeholders” and social responsibility from a different angle, bringing into consideration the role of the CSR itself as a social movement, and of those who seek to promote it.

Figure 5.1. Earth Day “symbolic planting,” sponsored by one of the local factories. Local schoolchildren and neighbors from Barrio La Planchita pose with shovels and plants on the site of a planned garden installation in the shape of the recycling logo. Photo by the author.

5 The Pharmaceutical Industry and the Problem of “Stakeholders” In consequence, business social responsibility requires a change of organizational culture from within the companies of the private sector, which permits them to redefine their internal and external relations. —Héctor Mayol and Bartolomé Gamundi (2004, 5; translation mine)

There is a business case for CSR, but it is much less important or influential than many proponents of civil regulation believe. CSR is best understood as a niche rather than a generic strategy: it makes business sense for some firms in some areas under some circumstances. —David Vogel (2005, 3)

Pharmaceuticals and the Problem of “Stakeholders” In the Puerto Rican context, corporate philanthropy, let alone Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), has emerged comparatively recently. In fact, CSR in the United States really took off as corporate philanthropy was just gaining traction on the island. While philanthropy can be a component of social responsibility, the underlying social relationships that are affected by philanthropy tend to be characterized by one-way obligations, and therefore inequality. The social relationships idealized in the CSR model are more characterized as partnerships. This competing set of narratives created some confusion even among those who wished to promote the significant social responsibility in business practices. This chapter describes attributes of the emerging CSR movement in Puerto Rico, and will consider where and with what success the pharmaceutical companies fit into that movement. Some of the challenges in Puerto Rico to advancing what is often referred to as “transformative” CSR are unique to the island. However, as a society that in many ways represents a blend of U.S. and Latin American cultural qualities, the lessons to be learned there about the influence >> 135 

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in Latin America because we need the experience of developing countries as much as we need the perspective from the States. We need to really get to the bottom of the pyramid, you know?

This was a reference to C. K. Prahalad’s treatise, much touted in CSR circles, The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Eradicating Poverty Through Profits (2005). This approach has been criticized for overemphasizing the poor as consumers, rather than as producers or innovation partners with businesses,4 a critique particularly relevant in the Puerto Rican context. In this case, there tended to be a split in the CSR establishment between those who identified most strongly with business, and emphasized markets, and those who identified more with people, and emphasized partnerships. Interestingly, I found that Liria, the CSR advocate quoted above, typically sympathized with residential communities and small businesses. The reference to Prahalad’s book inadvertently represents the pervasive influence of the business perspective, in which what might be called discursive “creep” occurs. In trying to pull large businesses, particularly multinational corporations, into the CSR fold in Puerto Rico, it was necessary to emphasize the business case, even when it distracted from what many saw as the main focus of the movement. For the majority of independent CSR professionals I encountered, their mission was deeply tied into a broader vision of sustainable development, an area in which Puerto Rico occupied an intermediary space. For example, there were, and continue to be, serious doubts as to what degree capitalintensive industries like the pharmaceuticals could contribute to an economically sustainable Puerto Rico. This was notable in the stated emphasis on strengthening small businesses, which represented the majority of Puerto Rican companies. However, in spite of their vision of Puerto Rico’s future, these dedicated proponents of CSR often found themselves in the position of legitimating corporations that were, by their own standards, barely more than “Compliant.” Corporate Philanthropy—Why “Doing Well By Doing Good” Isn’t Good Enough Corporate Social Responsibility, with respect to the pharmaceutical industry, is often spoken of in terms of issues such as Access to Essential Medicines5 or the ethics of drug trials and safety in both economically developing and developed contexts.6 In the first decade of the twenty-first century there was increased attention in academic literature and the press to these topics,

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Figure 5.2. The social-temporal grid. This can be used to map different kinds of decision-making, showing that the conventional notions of selfishness and altruism form a continuum. [©Copyright 19960101 Wilk, Richard R. Reprinted by permission of Westview Press, a member of the Perseus Group.]

self-interest (the social) represents an evolutionary step, suggesting a continuing need to examine organizations as parts of broader social systems.11 It also begs the question of whether certain businesses are moving beyond the traditional time perspective of quarterly bottom lines and engaging the tenets of sustainable development.12 Significant positive movement along both of Wilk’s axes (time and social scale) constitutes what is, in the twenty-first century, considered to be the ideal practice of corporate social responsibility. As mentioned above, even corporate philanthropy as we know it in the United States was a relative newcomer to the socioeconomic scene in Puerto Rico, in part because it is associated with the giving of charity. As one local CSR expert put it, “In Puerto Rico we’re very big on the ay benditos, oh, poor things. . . . But helping has always been something the church does, or that people do within their own families.” There have long been very distinct boundaries for cultural notions of social responsibility. While the church or the government (particularly since the 1940s) was perceived to have social and economic responsibilities to the populace at large, many people expressed to me a shared understanding that individuals, in general, do not particularly help strangers.

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and service programs on the island. Among the pharmaceutical companies I encountered in my research, the managers in charge of this area tended to present an interesting discursive juxtaposition: There was a good bit of ignorance expressed about the more substantial requirements dictated by the current state of CSR philosophy, and yet also a certain nonchalance that was summed up by one manager who stated that they were “already doing all those things.” An industrial ecology researcher who worked with the pharmaceuticals in Nocorá summed up their perspective to me in the terse phrase, “We’re doing what we can.” When I asked what impact she thought her work on improving cooperation for conservation of resources had, she reluctantly admitted that she thought that overall it would have little or none. Eager though they were to broadcast that they were already fulfilling CSR goals, with that title or not, the managers often seemed quite unaware of how their own corporate-cultural norms put severe constraints on their ability to be on the “cutting edge” of socially responsible behavior. In particular, the desire to limit legal liability, intrinsic to modern corporate entities, made it virtually impossible to substantively connect to, and to understand, community concerns. It could be said that in the terms of social theory, their actions demonstrated that it is not possible for corporate “persons” to empathize. This is because community concerns are, by their nature, shared, while fear of legal liability and its accompanying costs drove the drug companies in Nocorá to reflexively respond to many queries with, “That is not our problem.” This Land Is (Not) Our Land Several poignant examples of this “not our problem” outlook by pharmaceutical companies and their partners in Nocorá help illustrate the limits to community participation, and therefore to the idealized version of Corporate Social Responsibility I have outlined. The first was raised as a part of my fieldwork in Tipan with the environmental activists of CDAN. The second was presented to me during an interview with the Community Affairs representative from SuperMed. In chapter 1 I described in detail the concerns of Tipan with respect to the wastewater treatment plant, and discussed several issues related to corrosion in pipeworks leading from the factories to the plant. The buildup of hydrogen sulfide, as well as very extreme pH conditions, both issues raised in expert reports on the Nocorá treatment plant and its influent, had caused some of the influent pipes to be completely corroded

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In a meeting I attended between representatives of the municipal legislature and managers of the Tipan wastewater treatment plant, a series of exchanges took place, demonstrating that this appeal to blame shifting could also serve to diffuse confrontations between relative equals. Driving toward the treatment plant with one of the Tipan legislative representatives, he explained to me that one of the issues he wanted to raise was the collapse and flooding of one of the sewer pipes due in part to excess debris and other maintenance failures. He and the other legislators were informed that even though the part of the pipe they were talking about was in Nocorá, the division of PRASA (the Commonwealth water company) in charge of maintaining that section of the pipe was the Bajas office,20 in the neighboring municipality. When asked about the pipe collapse, the manager of the Tipan plant courteously suggested they call Bajas, and gave them the name of the person in charge and the phone number. As a generous afterthought, he also offered to call the Bajas office himself, to lend support to the Legislature’s request for service. I witnessed the second example of the “not our problem” perspective midway through a conversation that began with a joke about tearing up the roads. I arrived at SuperMed’s metropolitan San Juan offices exactly on time for my meeting, no thanks to the spontaneous decision on the part of the Public Works department to begin tearing up the highway between San Juan and Nocorá during rush hour that morning. When I sat down at the conference table, I broke the ice with the community affairs representative by mentioning that I had been afraid of being late because “they were breaking up the road por que le da la gana” [because they felt like it]. The woman shared my smile and said, in the gently sarcastic way that Puerto Ricans repeat the well-worn tourism phrase in response to everyday problems, “Welcome to Puerto Rico.” As our conversation moved forward she described for me the company’s notion of their local community—in this case the neighborhoods in their immediate vicinity. She then detailed the methods through which they had attempted to ascertain what the community’s needs and wants might be, visà-vis the factory. One of the key findings of an initial survey, she explained, was that people’s biggest concerns were about things that did not pertain to the factories. Recalling the start of our conversation she said, “They wanted us to fix the roads, for example.” She shrugged as if to say, You understand how it is. Their budget for community activities was very limited, she said, and besides, that was the job of the government. Business, I was to hear over and over again, was not in business to do the government’s job for it, no matter how poorly the government operated.21

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beyond what the law requires, at all levels of an organization (manufacturing, hiring, marketing, products, everything),” as one member described it to me. This goal, however, was not so easy to accomplish for many reasons. First, a consensus on a definition of CSR (and therefore the precise measurement of what constitutes “beyond”) has yet to be reached internationally.23 Additionally, TransformaRSE was in a position in which its directors felt the need to respond to both U.S. and Latin American cultural models of social responsibility,24 which were not always in line with one another. The principal members of the organization generally agreed on their goal of promoting ethical behavior beyond what the law required, and promoting alianzas or partnerships that brought business into greater and more meaningful contact with their various “communities,” or “stakeholders.” However, many policy and operational details remained unclear as the organization strove to find its place on the political-economic landscape. During my fieldwork and several years after, the emphasis of TransformaRSE lay strongly in creating and raising the consciousness of businesses, government, and higher education about CSR. Unfortunately, my research suggests that this process was made extremely difficult for a number of reasons. One issue that arose time and again in conversations with people working with or advising TransformaRSE was the pernicious tradition of paternalism in Puerto Rico. Paternalism, as one might describe the behaviors and attitudes of Nocorá’s alcalde Martínez, can sometimes masquerade as social responsibility in the workplace, but reinforces relations of inequality. It is founded in expectations that flow from structural dependency. The need to break from local dependency models, which were embedded within Puerto Rico’s larger political and economic dependency on the United States, was one area in which proponents of CSR were particularly emphatic about not overemphasizing corporate philanthropy. As one local businessman put it, “CSR requires a contract of social investment,” a recognition that businesses exist as part of a broader, existing social contract. However, in my observation the fear of what has been called cuponazgo, or relationships based on welfare-type handouts, and thus further dependency on the part of those receiving aid,25 proved to be a double-edged sword. In the practice of community-based giving and social responsibility, I often heard that “the pharmaceuticals do not want the commitment of established partnerships” (for example with individual local schools), for fear that they would be doing the government’s job (or would be called on to do so in the future). A narrow focus on preventing dependency, through avoidance of “cuponazgo,” also

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step. There was, however, some concern that the evaluation should not be too onerous, else the companies, “who are already fed up with evaluations, questionnaires, and indicators,” would decide that going beyond the requirements of the law was not really worth the effort. For these TransformaRSE members, the emphasis in their work was on making the “being responsible pays” argument as convincing as possible. While the question of power dynamics and dependency was implicitly raised by TransformaRSE in discussions about the overall cultural paternalism on the island, when it came to considering actual corporate-community relationships there was little, if any, analysis of power differentials between companies and their resident neighbors, their so-called stakeholders. Even David, for all his talk of spirituality, perhaps because of his grounding in more traditional economics, did not seem overly concerned with power. “Of course you have power differences,” he said once in an offhand tone. “You have them all throughout society, you have neighbors living next to people with more power, people who abuse the power they have, more wealthy and well-connected people. That’s always an issue.” This was a stark example of how easy it was for proponents of CSR to echo the views of business: recall the way, in chapter 2, one of the community affairs managers reflected this lack of understanding when he expressed his distaste for the influence of “outsiders.” Some of TranformaRSE’s advisors were more cognizant of the problem of power. Eugenio, a business management consultant, stated his concerns like this: One thing that really bothers me in this process, is if the organizations [the businesses] see this as “I’m better than you” . . . the chemistry of the process won’t work right. If it’s “I’m this powerful thing, doing something for you” . . . if it goes that way . . . [shakes his head]. It’s got to be, “I’m here, you’re here, let’s work together in ways that move us forward.

In practical terms, however, TransformaRSE’s members struggled with maintaining their concerns for the local community, in the face of a business environment that was generally resistant to the type of paradigm shift being promoted by the CSR advocates. The problem, as David perceived it, was that too many people for too long had believed that in order to be successful at business you had to, in his words, “leave your soul at home.” What was required, he suggested, was for mangers to be educated to see not only what was the morally correct choice (whether it be ecological, financial, etc.), but to understand that the same morally correct choice is also correct for

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It must be recognized here that the structure of corporations, created as legal entities for the express purpose of minimizing personal risk, can offset the threat of being seen as a “bad guy,” because accountability has a way of becoming structurally elusive.32 The maintenance of the corporate image as a whole has become a delicate balance of being seen as doing enough of the right things at the right times, while maintaining profitability. The result is a type of “responsibility phobia” through which “a cynic might define power—always an elusive concept—as the right to be unaccountable.”33 Likewise, the discourses of responsibility, or failures of responsibility, within corporations tend to emphasize isolated circumstances (“bad apples” if you will)—individuals, or departments associated with a given problem, such as environmental contamination. Making systemic (and expensive) changes to improve accountability in a complex organization is typically resisted. In an atmosphere of pervasive responsibility phobia, those called to give an accounting can at least fall back on the usual protests of ignorance, “I didn’t know that would happen. I didn’t know that was our land/problem/fault/obligation.” These protests of ignorance with respect to CSR indicators is legitimated by the fact that the indicators themselves, like other forms of measurement, are often a site of ideological and methodological contestation.34 Liria’s goal for CSR in Puerto Rico reflected a deep understanding of some of the problems described in earlier chapters, the ways in which the development process had further stressed existing fissures in Puerto Rican society. She said, My vision really is to facilitate connections between all the diverse groups. Education, providing information is part of that, building relationships is part of that. Without the relationships, without confianza, people will not work together. And when each group feels the other is not listening, it breaks confianza, destroys it. We have to build confianza. You can’t build social capital without it. And that won’t happen without communication.

However, in spite of her history of working in communities, it was evident that her strategy, like that of GUIA, suffered from its roots in deeply captured assumptions about what it would take to bring corporations to sit “at the same table” as the community: In pulling together our initial activities we really tried to make it happen from the point of view of the businesses, not the communities. This is not

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For every year from 1995 through 2002, the pharmaceutical industry was the most profitable industry in the U.S. Since 2002, however, its profitability has declined, with drug companies ranking as the third most profitable industry in 2004 (15.8%), with mining, crude-oil production the most profitable industry (22.1%). [Nevertheless] drug companies were three times more profitable than the median for all Fortune 500 companies in 2004 (15.8% compared to 5.2%).38

Before any reader begins to shake her head in dismay with the idea that new corporate social responsibility burdens emerging since 2001 have caused a drop in pharmaceutical profitability, it is instructive to take a look at another of Friedman’s points: He argues that for a corporate executive to spend money on any program that goes beyond that which is required by law is spending someone else’s money (emphasis mine). It seems fair to presume that poor management practices would likewise constitute spending someone else’s (namely the stockholders’) money. In August 2005, MSN Money’s “Company Focus” column declared one of the Nocoreño multinationals’ CEOs one of the “Most Outrageously Overpaid” in America, citing his collection of $41 million in compensation while “shareholders have seen the stock decline by 48% over the past four years.”39 The following year he joined two other CEOs of companies with outposts in Nocorá (for a total of three out of four) in being fired for severe mismanagement issues, among them legal troubles relating to marketing of drugs, obscuring of clinical trial risk data, and “shareholder disappointment.”40 A look at the five-year stock performance charts suggested that these companies were not showing particular concern for their fiduciary responsibilities to stockholders, in spite of continuing to make strong appearances in other indicators of the Fortune 500. Broader indicators also suggest that the pharmaceutical industry was not alone in the trend toward overcompensation for executives at the expense of regular investors.41 Bringing the attention back to on-the-ground social responsibility, two facts stand out to further argue against an overly simplistic notion of the social responsibility of corporations. For the first half of 2005, Caribbean Business (the weekly publication of record for Puerto Rico’s business community) reported that overall sales for nine of the pharmaceutical companies operating in Puerto Rico had increased by 5.7 percent, though company earnings from that same period had remained flat.42 In assessing the lackluster earnings it was pointed out that several of the blockbuster drugs that had previously increased profit margins, such as Vioxx and Paxil, had been

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The Multinationals, in a Class by Themselves The challenges to promoting transformative corporate social responsibility in this setting were legion. However, with respect to the fundamental problem for TransformaRSE, namely convincing upper-level management in a business in Puerto Rico to embrace CSR, one issue particularly emerged. On the one hand, Puerto Rican CSR promoters seemed to have a ready-made emotional appeal at their disposal, particularly suited to wooing Puerto Rican–owned and -operated businesses. If one of the basic issues facing the island was that development in Puerto Rico had emphasized industrial growth without sufficient attention to environmental or economic sustainability, then the challenge was to create longterm strategies to develop Puerto Rico sustainably.46 All the key players in TransformaRSE were in agreement on this issue. As such, they were interested in bringing two groups on board both to promote CSR and to put it into practice: government, which they viewed in this sense as a business, and which many believed to be the most corrupt and environmentally unsound business on the island; and small- to-medium-sized local enterprises which, as David noted, often fall through the cracks in terms of watch-dogging, and yet can have a substantial impact on locally based issues of concern to CSR. The local nature of their focus, then, was promoting a vision of a sustainably developed future Puerto Rico. It was a vision that fundamentally did not mesh with the traditional incentives that drew multinational industries like the various chemical manufacturers to the island in the first place. However, taking on the tax incentives, whether federal or local, would automatically draw TransformaRSE into the political status debate. This was an outcome they consciously sought to avoid, as party politics on the island were perpetually deadlocked. For these reasons, they seemed willing to let the pharmaceutical industry in Puerto Rico off the hook, in a sense. Most of the big pharmaceutical manufacturers were involved in TransformaRSE’s activities, either as sponsors of certain programs, or participating in public relations events related to CSR. Two appeared prominently on their list of Corporate Friends. As far as key members of TransformaRSE were concerned, the pharmaceuticals were not even remotely on the cutting edge of social responsibility—they were still stuck somewhere in the shift from philanthropy to something deeper, and as a very conservative industry, not moving more quickly than they felt was absolutely necessary. In fact, many aspects of the business of ethical drugs belied the ability of drug manufacturers to be transformative: intra-industry competition has been a deal-breaker on several efforts

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the more they gained a certain popular status for performed commitment to the island. However, it is worth noting that, among the general populace, they may have been getting more credit than they deserved: while 936 was gone, the pharmaceutical industry continued to benefit from similar tax benefits: In 2008, according to the Puerto Rico Industrial Development Company (PRIDCO) website,50 companies incorporating as “Controlled Foreign Companies” (CFCs), including many based in the United States, continued to enjoy “no U.S. federal income tax,” and “a local corporate income tax rate of 2%–7%.” In 2012, they also continued to receive a wide range of other cost- and administrative-related benefits and incentives while making use of Puerto Rico’s “highly skilled, bilingual and productive labor force,” available at “manufacturing wages 65–80% lower than mainland U.S.” As a front page article in Caribbean Business announced, “Puerto Rico’s pharmaceutical industry remains strong despite end of 936/30A.”51 Indeed, at the time of this writing (2012), PRIDCO’s website also stated, “With only one word, we can explain why we are a major manufacturing location in the world and why 13 out of the top 16 medical device companies have presence in Puerto Rico: INCENTIVES.” With the continuing promotion of, and reliance on, financial incentives, it becomes more questionable as to whether the pharmaceutical industry could be considered a dedicated partner in Puerto Rico’s sustainable development. Which in turn casts some doubt as to whether the industry could be legitimately viewed as a stakeholder in Puerto Rico’s sustainable future.52 A Qualitative Look at Nocoreño Attitudes It is evident from the data presented in chapter 3 that citizens of Nocorá were not completely taken in by industry’s public face, even if they were not environmental activists. To further explore the complex outlook of Nocoreños, this section will examine some of the more qualitative responses to the survey described earlier. Here I place the commentary of several respondents in the context of their agree/disagree responses to the survey, as well as in the broader framework of the mandates of corporate social responsibility to treat the local community as valued stakeholders. To review, there were three survey questions which related particularly to the perceived role of the pharmaceuticals in “the community”: The first two were presented as statements, and respondents were asked to agree or disagree: (1) The pharmaceuticals are good neighbors, like part of our community. (2) The pharmaceuticals maintain a relationship of good faith and good communication with the community. And (3) Between the good things

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for the industry to improve environmentally, or that the residential community had the ability to demand the improvement. This sentiment was echoed by many residents who said simply, “What can we do?” in response to my enquiries. Community activities, constituting a wide range of activities such as health clinics, educational fairs for kids, street fairs, and concerts, presumably all fell into a range of things she believed the industry capable of, and potentially interested in, providing. The factories, for example, were well known for sponsoring science fairs (complete with attractive medals for the winners) and building covered basketball courts. As one informant described it, “We have more ball courts, and less physical activity than ever!” In chapter 6 I will return to the question of physical activity, and suggest ways in which it could be a vital area of positive community impact for the pharmaceutical companies. At the time of my research, however, most informants tended to view existing efforts as having limited impact. The second respondent was interesting in that she placed both the economic and physical health of the community squarely in the category of responsibility of the pharmaceuticals. However, she made no explicit connection between the environment and physical health, whereas for others, particularly, though not exclusively, in Tipan, the connection was an intimate one. This may be, in part, because Tipanecos have experienced what they consider to be a more active, rather than passive, betrayal of good faith on the part of the factories. For the rest of Nocorá the pharmaceutical companies are polluters, but in a sense no one promised they would not be. Their job was generally perceived to be to make medicines, provide jobs, and act philanthropically, whereas in Tipan, there was a record of promises made and broken that went back to 1981. And, as similarly described in the principles of the Corporate Social Responsibility movement, for Tipanecos philanthropy and technical compliance were not enough, taken in account with the belief that the factories continued to cause them harm. As can be seen in comparing these two sets of comments, and supported by the quantitative responses to the statement, “There is great concern over issues related to pollution from the pharmaceuticals,” most people in Nocorá were keenly aware of the pollution from the pharmaceutical factories. At the same time people had all sorts of methods for prioritizing their concerns. For many Nocoreños environmental contamination, even if it caused distress, was more of a long-range concern. In contrast, having a peaceful life in a smaller, more traditional town was often valued highly. My neighbor

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with his former employers had also given him the gravitas to approach other companies directly with requests for donations to his organization. Don Nelson’s wife, Doña Alegra, was very much his partner in the organization, and contributed greatly to the administrative support of the group’s activities. She explained to me that one of the reasons they were so successful was that they were well organized, and they were incorporated, an assessment echoed by the official Special Communities organizer assigned to several neighborhoods in the region. Incorporation, and the government financial oversight it required, gave potential donors confidence that the funds they gave would be used appropriately. The La Planchita community organization had, through the beneficence of at least two nearby companies, made the small building donated to them by the municipality a neat and functional space to host educational programming and planning for their future activities. I noted that the structure and their facilities (including expensive new audiovisual equipment) were superior to those used by the CDAN group in Tipan. This undoubtedly stemmed in part from the inability of CDAN to approach the companies with which they had a very confrontational relationship. However, my experience with CDAN also suggested that they lacked the more specialized type of organizational experience to seek external resources to bring their message to a broader community, or to see themselves as community leaders outside of a fairly narrow mission.56 In contrast, Don Nelson and his group were not tied to one central theme (apart from location) and could serve as facilitators of corporate-community relationships, while at the same time advocating for local needs. This is not to say that barrio La Planchita had been without its own environmental concerns. However, there were several issues that prevented direct confrontation with any one factory about pollution. Most obviously, Don Nelson’s ties to nearby SuperMed were well known, and he both implicitly, and at times explicitly, served to reduce public criticism of the company. Not one to act in a dictatorial style, he countered questions about pollution by pointing out, accurately, that in La Planchita the pollution was much less of an issue than it used to be. Supporting his view Doña Alegra assured me that the air in the valley57 used to be “mortal,” but that “now it’s fine.” They went on to explain how supportive the factories had been of their activities, particularly SuperMed. “We’re up at the factory talking to them all the time,” she told me. One particularly interesting activity that took place in the SuperMed factory during my association with La Planchita exemplified the degree to which the factory-resident relationship represented almost an inversion of what was typical. Through his relationship with the Community Affairs

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ever-beautifying pueblo of Nocorá, needed to more directly address lingering local concerns about the environment. The following chapter considers the implications of high rates of diabetes in Nocorá in light of both conventional and more holistic approaches to environmental health. It reflects on both the negative impact and positive potential that the pharmaceutical industry has in health promotion.

Figure 6.1. An educational display presented by one of the pharmaceutical companies during the American Cancer Society’s “Relay for Life” fund-raiser. The seats of the Ferris wheel are labeled with the individual responsibility strategies for addressing cancer: Nutrition, Exercise, Prevention (in this case through personal behavior modification, such as quitting smoking). Photo by the author.

6 Radical Redistributions of Knowledge A Holistic View of Environmental Health Another assumption behind most education interventions is that knowledge flows from the top to the bottom of social hierarchies, and from experts to lay people. According to this position, if people act in ways that professionals deem unhealthy, they must do so from ignorance. —James Trostle (2005, 126)

Asked what should be done to help the poor, otherwise articulate middle-class professionals suddenly grope for words. They profess ignorance. This, they say, enters the realm of politics and economics, neither of which is possible for ordinary people to understand. Probably it will take experts to figure it out. —Robert Wuthnow (1996, 289)

In the evolving social relationships between corporate entities and local actors, complex forms of moral commitment and priorities continue to take shape.1 For outside observers, these commitments frame what can look like contradictory policy decisions and alliances. In the case of Nocorá, government and corporate actors often dedicated resources to projects that were legitimately for the public good, while avoiding the deeper roots of health problems and economic stagnation. This chapter looks at some of the broader health and economic implications of the industry moving forward, and I analyze a number of examples in which the structural context makes it difficult for Nocoreños to make “good health choices.” In this context, I explore strategies though which activists and educators can promote a more equitable redistribution of knowledge for the benefit of residents and employees exposed to both ambient pollution and unhealthy pharmaceutical work environments. I also suggest some philanthropic and programming opportunities for the drug companies to support these efforts, as well as a broader notion of environmental health, in the event that they are >> 165 

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the training as hands-on as possible. However, it remained unclear whether the type of training offered (emphasizing primarily vocational skills and associate’s degrees, as opposed to more advanced degrees in the chemical sciences) would open as many doors as hoped. In an interview with Caribbean Business in 2002, a local manager boasted that about 76 percent of the workforce in the Nocorá plant had degrees in science and engineering, allowing that the rest had vocational and technical degrees. As a percentage of an already small workforce, those high school graduates pursuing technical training with the goal of working in the pharmaceutical industry, or even in the burgeoning biotechnology sector, might be at risk of simply creating and facing stiffer competition for available work. While estimates from the 2010 Census and American Community Survey indicated that the population of Nocorá was beginning to grow, data from these same sources, as well as the Bureau of Labor Statistics, revealed that the unemployment rate in the same time period was fairly stable. These estimates also showed that only 18.3 percent of the civilian workforce was employed in manufacturing. Additionally, there have long been educational problems that a technical university could not address as a stand-alone solution. Although all the pharmaceutical companies had education programs aimed at improving science and math achievement in local K–12 schools, there appeared to be substantial room for improvement. A series of interviews with school administrators, as well as qualitative comments submitted through the survey of elementary school teachers, suggested that there were powerful constraints on the quality and duration of pharmaceutical investment in Nocorá public schools. While the key industry players often touted their donations of lab equipment, prizes for science fairs, and the time scientists devoted to the training of science teachers, several I spoke to admitted, “We could do much more.”2 Furthermore, there remained the broader problem that significant numbers of students were failing to complete high school. This suggests that the students in need of the most help were not benefiting from existing programs. And without a high school diploma, or equivalency, they would not even qualify for enrollment in the new technical programs. Finally there remained the crucial question of what would happen to technical workers when they finally attained their pharmaceutical jobs. It is true that the wages and benefits for those who worked full-time (as opposed to the increasing numbers of temporary workers and contract workers) were among the highest on the island. But many of these workers worked in rotating shifts, working sequentially in different eight-hour time slots. A neighbor of mine explained the rigors of working “turnos” in a pharmaceutical factory one evening, concluding that she had finally quit when the factory,

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mother who used to work in one of the factories, and who had no hair left on his entire body. Well, the dust, you know, the chemical dust, before they had those suits they wear now—well even if you wore a mask, the dust could just get into every pore. And after a while, all his hair just fell out. Like he’d had chemotherapy for cancer.

Everyone in Nocorá knew stories like these. Another woman told me that after seeing so many of her co-workers become ill, her mother eventually requested to be moved off the line and into office work for PharmaGigante. She’s worked for them for, I don’t know, 25 years? And finally, she took a look around and said, “I need to get off the line.” She told me she and some of her coworkers were talking about it and they realized that a lot of the women they started out working with aren’t around anymore. She had one friend who got a really rare kidney disease—something that doesn’t just happen, you know? And this woman, well, she didn’t really like to follow the safety procedures. She seemed to think nothing bad was going to happen to her—she was strong, she didn’t need to do that stuff. But eventually this kidney thing happened. And Mom says that it surely must be related.

Resistance to factory-based discipline techniques can be construed as “weapons of the weak”7 and surely fits into the Puerto Rican cultural idiom of bregar. Workers may feel temporary victory over their bosses or the company by not following safety protocols, but in the long run their triumph is hollow. Such actions often have primarily short-term benefits for workers, and are unlikely to serve to create a substantial basis for classbased struggle.8 In this setting la brega became an endless war of position, or minor victories, forever failing to culminate in paradigm-changing wars of maneuver (as Antonio Gramsci9 would distinguish them). NegrónMuntaner has offered a powerful argument that the techniques of la brega (such as jaibería) may have contributed to the success of social movements, such as ousting the navy from Vieques.10 However, resistance to capitalist discipline in the form of ignoring rules on the pharmaceutical factory floor has little potential to disrupt production at a cost to the corporation. From a public health perspective, the celebration of “agency,” or the making of choices within the narrow boundaries available to workers and residents explored in the present research, opened a space in which there were few options for gaining ground in comparison to the personal damage it

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of both reported morbidity and mortality, Nocorá was an outlier in what might have been a surprising disease category: diabetes.16 Given the available data, it is not surprising that during my interview with the lieutenant alcalde (who was in charge of health policy for the municipality), he emphasized public health programming directed at diet and exercise. When asked about health concerns in the municipality, he acknowledged that the director of the municipal clinic had reported that Nocorá had somewhat higher rates of cancer, though he did not know the numbers specifically. “Not like Vieques,”17 he assured me. In jumping right to a concern about cancer he inadvertently disclosed two underlying assumptions: (1) that carcinogens were perceived as being a concern, and that therefore, (2) cancer was presumed to be the most significant risk from a polluted environment. These biases, while very common, can have profound policy implications. By referring to the perceived cancer-environment connection, and then minimizing the cancer concern, he downplayed environmental health as a whole. In a further effort to shift the focus away from the environment, he stated that lifestyles were more his concern than pollution-related disease, particularly diets high in fat and alcohol. Stressing his belief that education was important, he praised Dr. Johnny Rullán (the secretary of health at the time, and member of his own PPD party), saying that the “Salud te recomienda” campaign was going in the right direction. It was extremely unfortunate, he said with passion, that people did not understand that nutrition and exercise were the keys to public health. Citing in support of his statement that the health secretary was an epidemiologist, the lieutenant alcalde reasoned, “he would know the causes of disease.” Absent from the conversation about obesity and its role as a risk factor for heart disease and diabetes were questions about the role of both environmental and occupational health considerations for all three. As evidenced in the design of the kite-making workshop described in chapter 5, this public official embodied the belief that if people could just be brought out into the open air for a fun activity, and be offered free fruit, they would begin to exercise and eat more healthily. From this perspective government, perhaps in conjunction with partners in private industry, was primarily responsible for identifying problems, and providing information. There was an assumed relationship between the possession of knowledge, combined with the right attitude (or belief), to predict health practices, known as KAP in public health.18 The notion of KAP assumes that the individual is responsible for acquiring and maintaining the “right attitude” toward his or her personal health, and consequently, that if the individual has the knowledge and fails to behave in a healthy manner, then the individual is at fault. Though research has identified the existence of a KAP-gap,19

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Professionals working in specialized fields notoriously find it irksome to work with “the community”; I have even heard this aversion expressed, in its most extreme, as “a horror,” both in Puerto Rico and on the mainland. In my own field experience I encountered this attitude on a number of occasions, as I was sometimes identified by people of authority (such as a field investigator from the Environmental Quality Board) as something of an “expert” myself, if only because I had substantially higher academic credentials than many of my Tipan informants.22 Epidemiological methods do not necessarily have to be sacrificed when working with communities unfamiliar with those methods. However, public health professionals must be more broadly aware of the contexts of their work, and be able to anticipate, for example in an investigation of air pollution, concerns the community might have about the role of certain questions in a survey. Field workers conducting the surveys must build rapport, at a minimum, with designated community leaders who were likely involved in bringing the study to the location in the first place. Working together to use the research methods as a way of sharing information with the people themselves should be a priority as much as collecting rigorous data. Indeed, having to engage with non-experts in this manner may well be one way to guard against, as Marilyn Nations put it, the dangers of intellectual rigor mortis in pursuing quantitative rigor.23 Additionally, the use of new technologies, such as GIS mapping and sophisticated air or water testing equipment, is an example of how expertise can, even inadvertently, obfuscate the knowledge-gathering process for community nonexperts. Orientation to the uses of technology, and ideally, development of programs to train local groups to monitor their own air and water quality, should not serve to simply dazzle. Speaking from the experience of working in Tipan on such a project, I know it can be frustrating and timeconsuming to bridge technical and local understandings. But that does not absolve those of us who have the status of “experts,” ostensibly working for the public good, from treating knowledge itself as a public good. For example, when testing the pH of a local water source, the reading itself is unlikely to be meaningful to a person without a high school level background in science. However, to be able to say that a measurement of three is “roughly the same as vinegar” can give a concrete sense to an otherwise context-free number. Explaining concepts like “within the range of normal” can also make unfamiliar measurements less intimidating. Likewise, technical experts can learn a great deal from local residents about the history and social context in which they are taking measurements and gathering other data.

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community burden of caregiving produced by chronic ailments. Further research as to how it has affected day-to-day household economics and other dynamics would be necessary to evaluate this burden, but there is no doubt about its existence. Finally, the importance of trust for perceptions of risk29 cannot be underestimated in Tipan. Given the potential for a patient’s negative experiences and expectations to influence health outcomes and affective state (as in a placebo or nocebo effect),30 low levels of confianza appear to compound a variety of chronic problems for the seaside residents. And so, with reference to a place that is axiomatically clichéd as a “paradox,” I would like to suggest yet another theoretical paradox with potential for policy relevance: On the one hand there is no doubt that individual behavior, embedded in an environment compromised by corporate behavior, continues to have a measureable impact on health in Puerto Rico. On the other hand, overemphasizing the agency, or “resilience” of Tipanecos or other Puerto Ricans for the sake of not “speaking for the subaltern” or supporting their human dignity, relieves the pharmaceuticals and the various government agencies and actors discussed of their collective responsibility. Consciousness and Communitas: El Pais Posible [The Possible Country] I have expropriated the tagline “El Pais Posible” from the Special Communities (SC) propaganda as the subheading of this section because I believe that one of the underlying messages of the SC initiative was that corporate sponsorship was and will be part of the solution to Puerto Rico’s socioeconomic woes. If not through sponsorship outright, this will occur through corporatecommunity partnerships, with the benevolent facilitation of government, as exemplified by the activities and relationships of barrio La Planchita (chapter 5). In some cases SC leaders have called into question the benevolence of the municipal governments, because, as Don Nelson put it, many of them “no quieren bregar con las comunidades” [they don’t want to work/struggle with/ alongside the community]. Many SC leaders believed, and my observations suggest correctly in some cases, that the alcaldes have found too much community empowerment threatening. In such cases, leaders who did not have combative relationships with local industry could find it tempting to align themselves with businesses, who in turn seemed to appreciate their newfound capacity and, from a certain perspective, enlightened self-interest. The traditional environmental rhetoric in Puerto Rico is closely allied with that of political independence, because it is based in a critique of a colonized mentality.31 In this frame it is easy to diagnose certain kinds of

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represented in medicine, public health, and environmental administration, has had too much invested in the persistent disconnect from local community to accomplish meaningful change. The contrast between La Planchita and Tipan is useful in illustrating the consequences of two different tactical approaches within the industry: Tipan had, to a certain degree, achieved its “environmentality” because it had never really been the subject of corporate philanthropy or goodwill. Geographically separate from the industrial parks of Salvador, waste arriving in Tipan was already de-identified with any one particular factory, eliminating the theoretical incentive for any one corporation, except the water company (PRASA), to perform as a good neighbor. The lawsuit by CDAN on behalf of the Tipanecos, even if it failed to establish a legal liability, was the only means by which this isolated group of residents could create a binding social liability to improve the plant. In La Planchita, while a general legal liability for improving air quality had been enforced by federal regulation on individual factories, there also existed an undeniable social relationship to local residents, in which the companies needed to work to some degree (however limited) to socially acknowledge and engage with those who lived nearby. The greatest barrier to these steps for social (and thereby health and environmental) progress is that in general corporations have little or no incentive to alter their established patterns of behavior. In early 2012, the New York Times reported on an explosion in a factory in China that supplied components for Apple’s best-selling iPad, a deadly accident that brought the issue of CSR front and center in the global news cycle. Among other points made in the story,37 Apple’s contradictory attitude toward health and safety along its supply chain exemplifies the primacy of the corporate desire to reduce costs. While sources from within the company asserted that there was a commitment to maintaining Apple’s code of conduct for suppliers, they nevertheless admitted that, like for the pharmaceutical industry, such a high premium was placed on competition and secrecy that accountability ultimately suffered. In conclusion, the authors noted that without intense outside pressure, primarily from consumers, companies like Apple will focus on their bottom line. As one Apple executive was quoted as saying, “right now, customers care more about a new iPhone than working conditions in China.”38 In the case of pharmaceuticals, customers are likewise reluctant to demand any changes that could cause already high drug prices to go up, though they do express concerns about the safety of the products themselves. Still, average consumers have little awareness of the conditions of drug production, let alone any downstream environmental impact.

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funding pool, reducing the concern that any actions critical of the industry would result in immediate reduced funding.39 An example of the kind of knowledge-exchange relationship I am promoting was demonstrated by several environmental activists who provided support to CDAN over many years. An environmental economics professor who grew up in Nocorá expressed her approach to building community knowledge and capacity bases like this: “When I come here, I don’t come here as a professor. I come here as Paula.” She acknowledged that they treated her with the respect accorded a highly educated person in Puerto Rico, but she was always mindful that their knowledge, and their priorities, while at times different than those she might choose, were important. She tried to share with them knowledge to which she had access, such as the equipment and technical ability necessary to measure certain water quality indicators. And while it was sometimes an uphill battle, in part because many of the older members of CDAN were so impressed by the technology, she warned that technology is not sufficient. “There are people who mean well, who sweep in and give impressive presentations, using GIS mapping and PowerPoint—and then they sweep out again.” When technology takes the place of communication, at the end of the day the community is not really left in a different knowledge state than they were before. The approach of redistributing knowledge was also echoed by another environmental advisory group in a series of educational activities they sponsored called “Measuring Our Beach.” In the face of overbuilding on the coasts, including the receipt of permits to build in zones which were at regular risks for flooding due to tidal flows, the workshops brought groups of residents in beach neighborhoods to physically measure the maritime zones. The workshop created a physical (or embodied) experience, as well as an intellectual understanding of the meanings of the laws that were meant to protect the publicly owned, severely ecologically burdened shorelines. As such, the activities contributed to a sense of shared ownership of the coastal resources, which the organizers hoped would improve accountability in the regulation of construction and tourism. Conclusion In a 1999 article on the risks of groundwater contamination in Puerto Rico, Constantina Skanavis argued that a combination of targeted educational programs (sponsored by EPA) and engagement with religious leaders to raise environmental consciousness would be the ingredients to a successful public health campaign on that issue. Relying on a study of political attitudes from

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or refusing to participate in public health programs can be counterproductive in the long run. A radical redistribution of knowledge, as well as a greater valuation placed on local residential knowledge of the environment, is essential to ensure the sustained local connectedness that is required for long-term ecological accountability of corporate entities, government agencies, and local residents. Only through an unrelenting commitment to this broad understanding of community health and well-being will Nocorá, and indeed all of Puerto Rico, achieve some degree of ecological balance, and sustainability.

Figure E.1. The author with members of CDAN, surveying the land and water of Tipan.

Epilogue

In the time following my fieldwork several important events changed, and may yet change, the everyday lives of Nocoreños. The Tipan court case was declared a class action and was settled for several million dollars, including substantial investments in infrastructure for the wastewater treatment plant, and the hiring of a professional monitor. In the context of such settlements the dollar amount was not actually that significant, and at most families in Tipan received a few thousand dollars. The majority of residents nevertheless accepted the settlement in the spirit of hoping that it would create long-term accountability for management of the plant. In conversations with residents in 2011, however, they still expressed concerns. Don Eduardo, whose efforts with CDAN had become reinvigorated since the settlement, expressed the ongoing potential for pollution as “still worrying.” In addition to sporadic problems with odors, residents remained extremely concerned about the potential for water pollution from runoff from the fields where the sludge from the plant was spread for recycling. In 2012, after years of being told how harmless the process was, the sludge program was finally brought to an end. In the summer of 2012, working in conjunction with both of the Tipan community groups, we inaugurated a water monitoring program through the World Water Monitoring Challenge (www.worldwatermonitoringday. org). While sophisticated equipment for such a program would be expensive, through programs like WWMC, communities can gain access to tools to measure basic water quality. The posting of the data in a global internet database would be one step toward creating both awareness and accountability for local environments. In a more surprising turn of events, the alcalde, whom I have called Estrello Martínez, was arrested and confined without bail, on charges of accepting bribes from contractors in exchange for privileged access to certain potential construction sites. The story, as it trickled out into the media, gave cause for some vindication of local community and environmental activists and critics who had long expressed concern over his style of governance. As >> 183 

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the most recent data from the USDA’s Economic Research Service, Nocorá’s unemployment rate was 2.4 percent higher than the island-wide average, and remained much closer to rural municipalities than urban metropolitan areas. In the wake of the alcalde’s resignation it was reported that the town had a significant budget deficit, which would severely limit planned development projects. In response to this reality, the new activists in Tipan were proposing a new approach to local development, in which small businesses like those providing services for visitors to the local beaches would take a lead. This new movement, while still quite small, suggested that a cultural shift in Nocorá had begun, in which the potential for local connectedness I have described had the possibility to take root.

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APPENDIX: Community Opinion Questionnaire

A. Demographic information (please circle the option that represents you). 1. Gender: M / F 2. Age: 18–24 25–29 30–34 35–39 40–44 45–49 60–64 65–69 70–74 75–79 80 or more

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55–59

3. Municipality of Residence: Nocorá/other Northern Region/other nonNorthern Region (if not Nocorá, skip to #5) 4. Sector of Municipality: Tipan / Bo. Pueblo / Salvador la Cruz / Delfín / Cañita Afuera 5. How long have you lived in the Northern Region? (if you are not from the North, skip to #6) ___ Years ___ Months 6. Do you or a family member work for, or have you or a family member ever worked for, a pharmaceutical? Mark all those that apply: You / Family Member / None —————————————————————————————————————— B. Questions about the relationship between the pharmaceutical industry and the community. Please circle the option that best represents your opinion: 1. Our quality of life would be worse if the pharmaceutical industry leaves Puerto Rico. Totally agree / More or less agree / More or less disagree / Totally disagree >> 187 

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190  191 isolated communities meet the world economic system, global and local bureaucracies, becoming what Agrawal has termed “environmental subjects.” Likewise, the work of Arturo Escobar (e.g. 2006) in the field of political ecology is concerned with locally situated economies, ecologies, and their cultural qualities. Escobar’s research emphasizes the importance of localized access to, and ownership of knowledge for, those traditionally disempowered. This emphasis on the value and control of knowledge is central to my own research. However, following the admonition not to lose sight of the ecology in political ecology (Vayda and Walters 1999), I have also attempted to ground my analyses in historical and ecological data, so as to examine the interaction between social dynamics and the environment itself over time. 37. Auyero and Swistun 2009. 38. Hawken 1993. 39. Padilla Seda 1966 [1956]; Seda Bonilla 1964. 40. See appendix. 41. See also Nash and Kirsch 1988. 42. That is to say, a statistical analysis of a potential exposure-disease relationship.

Chapter 1

This chapter is based on my essay Corrosion in the System, which received the Virchow Award from the Critical Anthropology of Health Caucus, and material from it has been published in a different format (Dietrich 2008). Used by permission of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group. 1. George 2008. 2. This is not only the case for wastewater. There has been increased concern over the need to manage solid waste, and corresponding debates over the building of incinerators versus other options. 3. Padilla Seda 1966 [1956]; Seda Bonilla 1964. 4. The term urbanización is used to describe a defined area of residential development, while parcelas are individual allotments within that defined area. The name of an urbanization is often used as part of the postal address. 5. Singer 1998: 107. 6. See e.g. Brown 1992. 7. National Center for Environmental Health 2005. In chapter 2 I will return to the theme of Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA). It is worth noting, perhaps with a touch of irony, that in spite of a highly contentious debate in the literature regarding environmental causes of cancer and the ability to statistically detect them (see, e.g., Ames and Gold 1998; Epstein et al. 2002), cancer has long been essentially the only disease risk evaluated in the EIA process. 8. Windsor 2006. 9. See Hunter and Arbona 1995; Office of Drinking Water 1979. 10. García-Martinez 1982; Neumann 1981. 11. Agencia EFE 1998. 12. Kennicutt et al. 1984. 13. Neumann 1981. 14. Office of Drinking Water 1979. 15. Hunter and Arbona 1995. 16. García-Martinez 1977; Goitía n.d.

192  193 46. Don Reynaldo and his wife Beatríz retired to Tipan in 1995, having lived in New York City for most of their lives. They chose Tipan because Don Reynaldo’s brother (a drug factory supervisor) lived there, and they wanted to be near the water and near family. He arrived at a time when the environmental movement still existed, but many of its original members were weary. Don Reynaldo had only a third-grade formal education, but his years as a foreman in a factory in New York gave him a voice of authority. He was a person whose integrity and dedication gained the admiration of friends and foes alike. 47. It would be possible, in theory, to create a less expensive, comparative study design between Tipan and an otherwise similar community to demonstrate that location was a factor in reported illness. However, there was no indication that this was the approach to be taken with the survey discussed here. If that type of survey had been the intention of the study design, then the obligation of those sponsoring and conducting the survey to explain the full implication of the design was not met. This type of conflict between expert knowledge and the health needs of communities has been described by Checker (2007), Harper (2004), and others on the U.S. mainland, and will be discussed further in Chapters 5 and 6. 48. Brown 1992. 49. Montealegre et al. 2004. 50. Pérez-Perdomo et al. 2003. 51. I will return to these new development plans in the Epilogue, based on recent return trips to Nocorá. However, I will note here that the animosity between Alcalde Martínez and Tipan did not abate, and his willingness to disregard the views of the resident community took a more material turn. He greatly expanded his use of the municipality’s powers of expropriation, and repossessed the land originally used for CDAN’s headquarters. It was, ironically, turned into a PRASA pumping station. 52. See Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico 2004; Huertas 2004. 53. Jimenez Barber 1994. 54. This principle of the mixing zone (Alaska Division of Water Quality Standards 2005) is typically used as an economical way of achieving water quality for treated wastewaters that do not meet drinking water quality, being emitted into natural bodies of water. 55. Jimenez Barber 1994. 56. Lorenzo and Serrano 2002. 57. Jimenez Barber 1994. 58. Roberts 1995. 59. Southern Technology Council/Southern Growth Policies Board 2000. 60. Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico 2004. 61. Many residents in Tipan were in fact not connected to the sewer system. These neighborhoods lie very close to the water table, and the design of the sewer underwent many revisions to accommodate this technical issue. Questions remained as to whether the eventual design (as well as the engineering oversight of PRASA) would cause sewer backups and other problems once it was built. 62. The role of the alcalde in the life and culture of Nocorá will be explored in greater detail in chapter 3. 63. See especially Freeze 2000. 64. Public Citizen 2002.

194  195 34. Concepción 1990, 37. 35. Alvarez de Choudens 1973. 36. Harmony is a recurring theme in debates about economic development and the environment, and will be explored more thoroughly in chapter 4. 37. Concepción 1990; see also Steinemann 2000: 631 for further distinctions. 38. Concepción 1990: 226. As Steinemann (2000) notes, the federal requirement for an EIS occurs, “if the potential impacts are deemed significant.” Concepción’s argument, a point of view confirmed by my own interviews with EPA officials, is that Puerto Rico’s original version of the federal law was in fact stronger, and was subsequently weakened. This process of weakening had the further effect of weakening the position of the EQB as an enforcement agency more generally. 39. See Dávila 2009. 40. Steinemann 2000. 41. See also Checker 2007. 42. See Susser 1998. 43. Steinemann 2000, 634. 44. Boholm 2003. 45. Steinemann 2000, 635. 46. Bakan 2004. 47. The practice of injecting processed waste into shallow fields is sometimes called “recycling” because the nutrients in the waste are used as fertilizer, even as the exposure to air and plant life assists the breakdown of various bacteria (see Overcash et al. 2005). As noted in the previous chapter, all activities related to the plant have long been mismanaged, resulting in suspicion as to whether these materials were being handled according to regulations. I recorded a number of incidents in which runoff from the sludge fields appeared to pollute local canals and streams. 48. Again, by culture they basically meant the intertwining elements of economy, social relationships, and abstract systems of belief. Though definitions of culture are as numerous as anthropologists themselves, this general model remains a useful way to think about it. 49. Padilla Seda 1966 [1956], 265. 50. Ibid., 279. 51. Seda Bonilla 1964. 52. Ibid. 53. Ibid., 278. 54. Ibid. 55. See Córdova 1980. Not to be confused with the Puerto Rican Socialist Party (PSP) founded in 1971 (see Torres and Velázquez 1998 for further reading on Puerto Rican revolutionary politics and links between the island and the mainland). 56. The ideological heirs of the Coalition of Republicans and Socialists in Nocorá tend to support statehood and the PNP. Those who maintain a more traditional Socialist perspective are more likely to support independence and the PIP, although support for this party is waning even among independentistas. 57. Padilla Seda 1966 [1956], 271. 58. Seda Bonilla 1964, 17; all translations mine. 59. Ibid. 60. See Ayala 1996.

196  197 7. During the time of my fieldwork, expropriations in poor communities were becoming an increasing concern among advocates for social and environmental justice. In the time since, several conflicts over expropriation erupted in the Tipan neighborhood of Barco de Caña. 8. It is interesting to note that political leaders in Nocorá have been drawn almost exclusively from the ranks of former teachers and educational administrators. Teachers were held in extremely high regard, perhaps because education was seen as necessary for economic success. The irony, considering the failure of Nocoreños to break into the limited local high-tech labor market, is profound. 9. Seda Bonilla 1964. 10. The alteration of a natural stream by excavation, realignment, lining or other means to accelerate the flow of water. 11. While the dam and related infrastructure work has prevented the annual flooding of downtown Nocorá, areas lying outside the wall, such as Tipan and Salvador, are still subject to frequent floods, particularly during hurricane season. There is also concern that protecting the town center, the core of Martínez’s urban revitalization initiatives, has resulted in worsening flood conditions in both Nocorá and Bajas, as the rivers all over the island swell with silt and other by-products of construction. 12. Turner 1969. 13. Dávila 1997. 14. Though it can be argued that through the patentes (local taxes) the pharmaceuticals indirectly sponsored at least half, on average, of any municipal function. 15. Activities of any size also require security and emergency-response units. The municipality had a substantial staff for these events, easily identified by their uniforms and new vehicles. According to a 2004 article in Caribbean Business (Ramos 2004), annual expenditures for total municipal police forces on the island are estimated at $114 million, part of an increasing trend toward non-state protection services. Nocorá’s own municipal police force was in the process of being created during 2004, as part of the effort to increase security and foment urban renewal. 16. It is not unusual for island-wide, and even internationally recognized, Spanish-language artists to perform. 17. In 2011, I was informed that laptops were now the item being given away selectively by the most affluent municipalities, including Nocorá. 18. Martínez had been alcalde since 1986—it was not inconceivable that he could have given a new bicycle, or the equivalent, to every child in town. 19. Seda Bonilla used Tönnies’ term Gemeinschaft which I am using interchangeably with Turner’s communitas (Tönnies 1957; Turner 1969). 20. De Vries 2002; see also Heine 1993. 21. Dávila 1997. 22. A velorio cantado is a tradition of singing (often the Catholic rosary) in honor of a saint. In this case the event is traditional Puerto Rican Christmas music in honor of the coming of the Three Kings (Epiphany). 23. Don Teodoro, in his 80s at the time of my fieldwork, was, like the alcalde, a former teacher, and very well-respected in Nocorá. He managed to be involved with the environmental movement CDAN and yet still have cordial relations with both the pharmaceutical companies and the alcalde due to his standing as president of the Centro. His commitment to the Centro was so strong that it always publically superseded his other potential conflicts.

198  199 credit. Oscar Lewis’s (1966) famed “La Esmeralda” neighborhood in San Juan is still considered poor and dangerous—but digital satellite dishes adorn many of its rooftops. For further analysis of this complex set of socioeconomic relationships, see Ortiz-Negrón (2009). 42. Sabater 2005. 43. So far I have seen little evidence that pharmaceutical shareholders represent an outspoken group of environmental activists capable of altering the behaviors of the companies in locations like Nocorá. This is likely in part due to the strong tendency of annual reports to paint the brightest environmental picture possible. There is some evidence that in other industries, activist shareholders may have the power to create greater accountability (see Welker and Wood 2011). 44. In a strict Marxist analysis of wage-labor, where skill levels (and therefore training) are minimal, and therefore workers are easily replaced, treating workers well does not pay. In the present pharmaceutical labor market of Puerto Rico there tend to be two classes of workers: those who are “part of the family,” the higher skilled, well-compensated; and those whose work is less skilled and increasingly farmed out to contractors/temporary services, such as security guards and those working in packaging. When a high-profile robbery of a drug shipment occurred from a Nocorá factory and it became clear that it was an “inside job,” several security guards I knew commented that it was no surprise: as contractors they had no special loyalty to the company, and were not treated especially well, in spite of needing to speak English. 45. Peterson 2004. 46. Díaz Quiñones 2000: 20. On a number of occasions I have discovered that my use of this verb in conversation is often taken as definitive evidence, despite my explanations to the contrary, that I myself am Puerto Rican. 47. Diaz Quiñones 2000: 22. 48. See e.g. Berman Santana 1996. 49. Here I am using power in the Foucauldian sense, as present, and persistent, throughout social relations (see e.g. Foucault 1990). 50. Negrón-Muntaner 2007; see also McCaffrey and Baver 2006. 51. See Duchesne Winter 2007; Torres-Velez 2010. 52. Though not immediately germane to this discussion, it is important to mention that Diaz Quiñones also notes yet another connotation for bregar, which one also sometimes hears in connection particularly with the expression bregar bien, a double entendre that might be considered to underlie the reference to politicians. An older usage of bregar translates loosely as “to fornicate” and was used to describe people having extramarital affairs, for example. In this case a politician might be viewed positively for his masculine strength used on behalf of his people (a paternalistic connotation), or in a neutral/negative sense this could connote that while the politician works for the people, he is simultaneously lining his own pockets. Many Puerto Ricans I knew seemed to accept this “win-win” self-benefit for politicians, though there is also an acknowledgment that working both sides of the equation can easily cross the line until one is simply “screwing” the public good.

Chapter 4

This chapter is an updated and revised version of an earlier article (Dietrich 2011), and is used by permission. 1. Mercer 2002. 2. See e.g. Horowitz 2009; Welker 2009.

200  201 celebration for another donation of $10,000, in which Velázquez noted, “We have survived thanks to the economic help of the [local] industries.” 32. Zonabend 1993: 125; emphasis in original. 33. Ashton 2008. 34. Prahalad and Ramaswamy 2004. In a market in which drugs increasingly support the quality of life, rather than provide obviously life-saving or life-extending remedies. It should be noted that their concern over reputation has had less impact on their behavior in Puerto Rico itself, (1) because the island does not represent a substantial portion of their market, and (2) until very recently word of their local pollution problems had not traveled much beyond Puerto Rico’s borders. 35. See Auyero and Swistun 2009; Horowitz 2011; Welker 2009. 36. Hanson and Yosifon 2003. 37. Auyero and Swistun 2009; Nazarea 1999; Tsing et al. 2005. 38. See Haraway 1991. 39. Tsing et al. 2005: 2. 40. For the sake of the example we will leave aside the question of whether this connection negatively impacts the overloaded system as a whole. Not having a sewer connection is not a viable alternative. 41. See e.g. Checker 2005. 42. In contrast, the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA, or AAA by its Spanish title), the official managers of the NWTP, could be considered the government utility that everyone loves to hate. 43. Lyon and Maxwell 2004. 44. Hanson and Yosifon 2003: 217. 45. See also Checker 2005. 46. Morgan 1993. 47. Yalamanchili and Smith 2008; see also Schiffman and Williams 2005. 48. See Berglund 2001. 49. See Morris 1995. Much work in anthropology using the concept of performativity focuses on gender performance (see also Butler 1988); however, the notion clearly resonates in other contexts, with other social identities (such as “expert”). 50. Nader and Ou 1998: 2. 51. Concepción 1990. 52. Gramsci 1971: 481. 53. Ismail 2007. The Center for Public Integrity (www.iwatchnews.org) has routinely reported on the pharmaceutical lobby in Washington, noting that between 1998 and 2006, drug manufacturers and their interest groups spent upwards of $733 million on lobbying activities. 54. In fact, I had acquired the document the week before through my own research on the Internet, and had asked CDAN about it. Shortly thereafter I was contacted by their lawyer asking, “Where did you get this?” Although it was indeed publicly available, it had been extremely time-consuming to uncover, and the lawyers for CDAN had limited research and support staff. 55. Auyero and Swistun 2009. 56. Jain’s (2011) analysis demonstrates, for example, the fluidity with which pharmaceutical companies have managed to convince seemingly every category of cancer “stakeholder” (patients, families, doctors, epidemiologists, to name a few) that survival for five years after diagnosis is success, regardless of the age and desired life expectancy of the patient.

202  203 22. Government financing, as Fischel points out in a discussion of Michigan’s Poletown project, is hardly a limiting force on projects benefiting private enterprise (2004). The U.S. Supreme Court decision in Kelo v. New London also further enhanced the ability of local governments to expropriate (and therefore, in a sense, to financially facilitate private business through public means). 23. Crook 2005; Sharp 2006. 24. See e.g. Kliksberg and Tomassini 2000. 25. Mayol and Gamundi 2004: 6. In the time of Seda Bonilla’s (1964) study this sentiment was described as “mamalonería,” or, metaphorically, the reliance on breastfeeding for sustenance. The word cupón is the translation of food stamps, the growth of which as a means of supporting Puerto Rican families, along with other types of payments, is discussed in earlier chapters (see also Dietz 2003). The neologism cuponazgo is a play on the term compadrazgo, or ritual co-parenthood, typical of Puerto Rican society prior to heavy industrialization. In this earlier context, the social ties of compadrazgo were “utilized daily in getting help, borrowing money, dividing up available work opportunities, and so forth” (Mintz and Wolf 1950: 360). 26. Shamir 2004, 669. 27. See Bakan 2004; Kovel 2002; Korten 2001. 28. Kovel 2002. 29. Hawken et al. 2010. 30. Such as those promoted in feminist and postmodern critical theory (see Ahearn 2001). 31. See e.g. Frank 1979; Ong 1987; Wallerstein 1991. 32. Unspoken here was the debate that came to a head in U.S. politics in 2011, as to whether or not corporations were persons in any real sense. From an anthropological perspective, elaborating on Bakan’s analysis (2004), current theories now suggest that avoidance of accountability to a community would not have made for a strong survival strategy in human society. Cooperation is now believed to be a key component of a robust model for human evolutionary success (Fuentes 2004), suggesting that, by analogy, purely profitdriven “individual” corporations do not behave as humans typically do. 33. Herzfeld 1992, 122. 34. Merry 2011. 35. Friedman 1970. See also Gibson (1995) for additional counter-arguments. Gibson points out that traditional views of stakeholders distinguish between “primary” and “secondary” groups, where primary are those to whom the corporation is contractually accountable. In my work I found that the generic term stakeholder was often used to blur the boundary between these two types of stakeholders for public relations purposes, while they remained distinct in practice. 36. It is important to note that shareholders also have the potential to inspire accountability beyond financial transparency and profit margins. However, that type of change requires significant effort and awareness on the part of “activist shareholders,” usually those who themselves own significant amounts of stock (see Welker and Wood 2011). 37. A key set of criticisms of corporate influence (see e.g. Korten 2001) particularly distinguish between capitalist economies and market economies. At the core of this argument is a belief that the corporate structure and its dominance, not market dynamics per se, are contrary to the public good. 38. Kaiser Family Foundation and Sonderegger Research Center 2004, 1. 39. Brush 2005.

204  205 the kinds of activities, such as outreach and non-hierarchical community education, with which members have had much experience. 57. The valley of the neighborhood Salvador was for many years, I was told, especially prone to thermal inversions, trapping the high levels of industrial air pollution, as well as car exhaust from the well-traveled route 4, relatively near the ground. In neighborhoods like La Planchita, which wind up the karstic limestone hillsides, the air in earlier years would indeed have been deadly. 58. Turner 1969. 59. Among their other concerns were: lack of sewers (rainwater: 92%; sewage: 91%); roads in poor condition: 74%; housing (need: 69%; need repairs: 59%); area prone to flooding: 49%.

Chapter 6

1. Welker 2009. 2. This perspective, from those who knew the programs the most intimately, stands in stark contrast to the more managerial attitude, “We’re doing what we can.” 3. Fujino et al. 2006. 4. Karlsson et al. 2003. 5. Heron and Pickering 2003. 6. There was, in fact, an explosion caused by a short circuit in the factory closest to us around the time of Tropical Storm Jeanne. It was reportedly caused by an electrical “short circuit,” but the local newspaper reported that there was some contact with a gas. None of us living near the factory ever knew what really happened, but the burning smell lingered for more than 24 hours. 7. Scott 1985. 8. Ong 1987. 9. Gramsci 1971. 10. Negrón-Muntaner 2007. 11. In an example that was expressed to me in a tone of adding insult to injury, one woman complained that for a temporary job in pharmaceutical packaging, she had to wear a special uniform provided by the company right down to the underwear, but that the cost of the uniform was deducted from her pay. In this case it seemed as if the uniform was designed as much to prevent theft as to ensure safety. 12. Mark Nichter, a highly respected medical anthropologist, asserted in a presentation to the 2006 joint meetings of the Society for Applied Anthropology and the Society for Medical Anthropology that medical anthropologists needed to “create a niche for themselves” in occupational health investigations of phenomena such as shift work. 13. Rylko-Bauer et al. 2006. 14. Singer and Clair 2003; Singer 2009. 15. Interestingly, interviews with health care workers and administrators at the clinic revealed that there were concerns based on anecdotal experience with air quality in Salvador la Cruz, near the factories, and in Tipan, near the treatment plant. 16. Calero 2005b; Ramos Valencia 2001. 17. See Wilcox 2001; Torres 2005. Though the rates of cancer in Vieques have been the subject of much debate, in part because of changing policies in cancer surveillance during the critical period of Navy bombing of the island, cancer and Vieques were undeniably linked in the public imaginary at this time.

206  207 40. Skanavis 1999, 35. She contrasts this with the idea that Anglo-American leaders are perceived as having been delegated to carry out the priorities that the majority has already agreed upon. 41. Escobar 2006. 42. In the case of Nocorá, the cultural ecology framework applies most directly to fishers (whose economic base has radically declined; see Griffith and Valdez-Pizzini 2002) and those who work in the factories. 43. Duany 2002. See also Aranda 2006. 44. See Negrón-Muntaner 2007; Sandoval 2000. I am also indebted to Jorge Duany for discussing with me some of the implications of his ideas for environmental activism.

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Index

Accountability, 4, 183, 203n32; of corporations, 3–4, 11, 21, 91, 122, 149, 177, 179, 181–83, 199n43, 203n35, 203n36 Activists/activism, 14, 17, 91, 103–4, 128, 150, 155, 158, 165, 172, 179, 206n32; shareholder, 199n42, 203n36; in Tipan, 16, 23–27, 34, 39–41, 46, 83, 92, 114, 121–26, 141–42, 183–85 Air quality, 3, 40–41, 92, 96, 160, 164, 172, 177 Alcalde (mayor), 13, 68, 70, 73, 118, 145, 160, 175; relation to pharmaceutical companies, 16, 41, 44, 71–72, 91, 100, 110, 114, 117; relationship to Tipan, 39–42, 91, 119, 124, 142, 171, 193n51, 197n23; role in Nocorá, 68–71, 80–90, 97, 111, 144, 183–85, 197n18 Ambivalence, 93, 104, 105, 122; of regulation enforcement, 5 Asthma, 40, 41, 174, 204n54 Astroturf advocacy, 123 Authenticity, 100, 112 Autonomy: environmental, 59, 85; political, 82, 85, 111, 118 Behavior: of corporations analyzed, 7, 11, 13, 46, 121–23, 136, 140–46, 177, 199n43, 201n34; as health risk factor, 9–11, 41, 163, 170–76, 180, 198n37, 206n18 Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), 35 Blame-shifting, 40–43, 62, 143, 148 Bregar (verb), 80, 102–4, 169, 175, 199n52; usage versus luchar (verb), 103–4 By-products, polluting, 7, 31, 35, 46, 110, 197n11

Cacique: defined, 88; alcalde of Nocorá as, 88, 118 Cancer, 169, 201n56; bias towards as indicator in environmental health, 171; epidemiological analyses of causes, 24, 61, 162, 171, 191n7, 205n17 Capital-intensive production, 52–54, 72, 100–101, 115, 137, 146 Capitalism, 7–9, 47, 64, 128, 148, 169, 203n37 Capture, 17, 112; deep, 111–15, 120–25, 128, 149; regulatory, 112–15, 194n33 Centro Cultural (de Nocorá), 12, 88–89, 114, 197n23 Chemical industries, 5, 25–26, 53–54, 115, 153, 168; influence on research, 114, 167 Chronicity: of disease, 10, 40–41, 160, 163, 172, 175; of everyday life, 104, 174; of pollution, 9, 37–38, 111 Clean Water Act (CWA), 5, 26, 35, 43, 189n6 Comité para Defender el Ambiente Nocoreño (CDAN) (Committee to Defend the Environment of Nocorá), 1, 14, 22–23, 27–28, 31, 33, 37, 77–78, 89–92, 104, 141–42, 179, 183; comparison to other citizen groups, 159, 176, 204n56; lawsuit by, 39–41, 92, 109–10, 112, 127, 177; relationship to Grupo Uniendo Iniciativa Ambiental (GUIA), 104, 111–12, 115–17, 120–26; relationship with alcalde, 118–19, 193n51, 197n23, 201n54 Communitas, 74, 79, 88, 97–98; 138, defined, 8; relationship to community health, 174–75 >> 225 

226  227 Expert, 17, 39, 43, 112, 125, 165, 173, 201n49, 206n22; knowledge, 8, 112, 116, 120, 152, 172, 174, 193n47. See also Expertise Expertise, 37, 112, 125, 126, 173, 180 Fomento Industrial. See Puerto Rico Industrial Development Company Gender: and employment, 70–72, 168–69, 198n30; and sterilization, 56, 70–71; women’s burden of care, 41 Globalization, 9, 190n36 Grassroots: movements, 3, 14–15, 23, 122, 154; organization(s) (GRO), 46, 93, 104, 109, 120, 123–24, 128, 178. See also Astroturf advocacy Grupo Uniendo Iniciativa Ambiental (GUIA), 13, 89, 104, 107, 111, 116–17, 121–27, 149, 154, 200n31, 206n33 Harm industries, 7, 120, 151 Harmony: ideology, 103, 111, 114–15, 120, 126; of industry and the environment, 59, 80, 120, 195n36 Health. See Community; Data; Epidemiology; Statistics; Suffering; and specific health problems Heart disease, 97, 168, 171, 172 History: of environmental regulation in Puerto Rico, 58, 126; of pharmaceutical industry, 5, 54, 168; of Nocorá, 6, 12, 15–16, 46, 51–53, 63–74, 184 Ignorance: professed by corporate managers, 31–32, 62, 141, 149, 152 Independentistas, 27, 104, 195n56. See also Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP) Lawsuit: as environmental justice tactic, 5, 31, 35, 92, 121, 174; by Tipan residents, 36–37, 39–41, 45, 92, 109, 116, 124, 133, 172, 177 Liability, 62, 133, 141, 177 Medical anthropology, 9, 24. See also Critical Medical Anthropology (CMA) Mixing zone, 29, 30, 32, 42, 43, 192n40, 193n54

National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), 32–33 New Progressive Party (PNP), 58, 65, 69–70, 86, 88, 117, 195n56 NIMBYism (Not In My Back Yard activism), 46 Nocorá: characteristics of, 15, 19, 22 24–26, 53–56, 73–75; history of, 6, 12, 16, 51, 63–72. See also Alcalde; Pollution, acceptance of; Tipan Nocorá Wastewater Treatment Plant, 1, 3, 14–15, 34, 43, 77, 89, 111, 119, 141, 202n20; construction of, 20–29, 35–36, 59, 116; management of, 27–32, 38–39, 42, 44, 104, 112, 119, 142–43, 183; poor maintenance of, 27, 31–32, 37, 39, 40–41, 124, 164, 174, 177, 205n15; sludge (biosolids) from, 30, 63, 92–93, 183, 195n47. See also Comité para . . . (CDAN); Puerto Rico . . . (PRASA) Noncompliance. See Compliance Non-governmental organization (NGO), 13, 77, 128, 146; Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), 13, 17, 136, 144, 154; environmental, 5, 12, 16, 89, 104, 111, 154. See also specific organizations Nuisance complaints, 9, 31, 125 Odors: associated with health problems, 37–39, 41, 192n45; as evidence of pollution, 22, 31, 43, 92, 111, 124, 183, 192n45 Operation Bootstrap, 51, 54, 57, 72, 101, 115 Operation Serenity, 57, 88 Participation: limitations on, 41, 57, 59, 80–82, 100, 104, 121, 141, 176; performance of process, 60, 74, 82, 120, 124, 126. See also Ritual People of Puerto Rico (PPR) research study, 56, 63–66, 73 Performance (social), 11, 31, 79, 88, 124, 174, 160, 177, 201n49; influence on perception, 16, 60, 97, 100, 126, 155, 206n22

228  229 Status (social), 24, 97, 111–12, 116, 122–26, 128, 155, 160, 173, 206n22 Sterilization, history of in Puerto Rico. See Gender Suffering, 11, 15–16, 24, 47, 58, 121–23, 127; contestation of, 37, 46, 110; social, 11, 40, 53, 112, 174 Sustainability, 12, 126, 181; economic, 52, 146, 153; environmental, 114, 153 Symptoms. See specific health problems Syndemic(s), 10, 170

Transfer payments, 52, 115, 200n27 TransformaRSE, 13, 144, 150, 178; limitations on success, 145–48, 153–54. See also Corporate Social Responsibility Trust, 4–5, 51, 68, 80, 90–91, 96, 119, 132–33, 198n26; relation to risk perception, 9, 99–105, 112, 154, 174–75. See also Confianza

Taxes: benefits to pharmaceutical industry, 51–54, 95, 153, 155; locally paid, 86, 164 197n14 Tipan, 21–47; differences from rest of Nocorá, 3, 14–16, 20; history and settlement of 63, 66–67. See also CDAN Toxic Release Inventory (TRI), 14, 35

Volatile organic compounds (VOCs), 30, 34, 39

Unemployment, 25, 52–53, 57–58, 70–73, 115, 167, 185, 190n22

Walk-a-thons, 97, 162, 198n33. See also Philanthropy Water quality. See Contamination; Nocorá Wastewater Treatment Plant; Pollution

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About the Author

Alexa Dietrich is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Wagner College. Trained as both an anthropologist and epidemiologist, her interests are inherently liminal, and lie at the intersections of many fields: culture and health, technology and the natural environment, and qualitative and quantitative methods. She continues to work with communities in Puerto Rico on issues related to environmental health. In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy she is also working with a number of colleagues to better understand environmental health vulnerabilities and decision-making where she lives and works, in Staten Island, New York.

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